Online Student Survival Guide

Posts Tagged ‘what to expect with online learning’

Battling 1st Day Jitters

WGU on August 26, 2008

I can remember it clearly. My mother stood there holding my hand as I cried. She handed me my Scooby Doo lunchbox and told me that she wanted to hear all about it at the end of the day. I was nervous, but it turned out that I wasn’t alone. All of the other teacher’s were worried about the first day of school, too. OK…that didn’t really happen (although it might this year with teaching Fifth Grade for the first time.) We have all experienced the first day jitters of being a student, though. College, of course, holds its own unique jitters. What room am I going to be in? Will I get lost? What will the professor be like? Will everyone else be better prepared than I am? Although there are no brick and mortar classrooms to worry about, most of the other concerns are common to online education, as well. Online professors, and your relationship with them, run a wide spectrum, just like in the traditional setting.  Online learning occurs in a variety of ways. With some online courses, you are logging in to the class at a set time and communicating in real time with the professor and the other students. This is very much like what most of us are used to, but with a degree of anonymity that may help relieve your jitters. Some classes are run asynchronously and are conducted entirely through emails and writings. Hard to scope out a professors feelings and, too often, easy to misread communications, but you gain the freedom of time. At WGU, learning opportunities are given to you that will enhance your program, but are not required. Most of my communication for this Masters degree has been with my mentor. She has been wonderful at relieving any nervous nous that I may have had.

So what ARE online students to get nervous about? Anyone that has used the technology that is required for an online learner knows the perils. Computers that crash.  Networks that are down. Software that won’t do what I want it to do. What can you do to relieve that stress? I put everything on to a USB drive as well as my hard drive. I can easily move my work from home computer to work computer to logging in at the local library if I needed to. The one thing that I would change from MY setup is that I would prefer to have my own computer instead of the one that I share with 3 children. I worry often that one of them will gum up the works and send me scrambling. As far as you class work goes, make sure that all components of your computer are working just before logging in for your first day. Check out the course website as soon as you are able to and explore ALL the areas of it. If there are files to download, do it NOW and file them in an organized manner. Go through the syllabus and make sure that you have all of the materials, software, or hardware that you need to meet the course requirements. If it is new software to you, spend time EVERY DAY exploring the software and just trying new things. It’s the best way to learn.

I have found my online experiences to be far less nerve wracking than my previous college encounters. In fact, because of the kind of guy I am, I have found them to be almost exhilarating.  The first time that the online professor fired up MY web browser remotely and took me to his web page without my typing a thing , I knew that THIS was the learning method for me. I love exploring new software and seeing new technology in action. First day jitters, for me, have been replaced by first day eagerness.

What are YOU worried about?

Your Study Environment

WGU on June 17, 2008

Where are you going to set up your work area? And how will this impact the rest of the household? With dialup connections, the PC is almost always right next to the telephone; with cable broadband, near the TV. Both are very poor choices as you can see. Improvising at the dining room table won’t last long. The height is all wrong, and no dining room chair will be comfortable for extended periods.

You’re going to need space for your books, a printer, and other office supplies – like ink-jet or laser cartridges, paper, file folders, calendar, etc. and a good reading lamp. In short, you need a home office. If you have a spare bedroom, that’s ideal, but you may have to shoehorn something into a few feet in a corner of a room. (I do more printing than most people I know, so I switched to a monochrome laser and cut the cost per page nearly in half over color ink-jet. The trick with either one, though, is to do your printing in batches once every two or three days.)

You can cram in a lot into minimal space with a well-designed computer workstation; or you can buy a folding 5- or 6-foot ‘banquet’ table and an office chair for about the same price. Any of these are much closer to the proper height for keyboarding and reading than your kitchen or dining room table.

Next, you really need a comfortable office chair. I’ve been very satisfied with the one I bought in the middle of the pack as far as features and price. The problem here is that you’ll have to physically go to an office supply to really find an assortment and put each to the test; so much the better if you can buy the same make and model on eBay or amazon or somewhere else cheaper.

My smartest investment was a reading lamp from Ott-Lite. In fact, I was so impressed with the one I originally bought for my piano, that I bought a table model for my desk and a floor model for my favorite reading chair.

All these can break your budget, but they are things you really need and all of them have a service life that should take you beyond undergraduate and graduate school. The real test, though, is whether what you set up makes you eager to go back for your next session because the environment you have set up is pleasant and comfortable, or not.

 

 

What to Expect with Online Learning

WGU on May 30, 2008

To the over-worked adult looking for a convenient way to fit education into an already busy schedule, online learning seems like a dream come true. You can study in your PJ’s at any time you want, complete assignments when and how you want to, create a schedule that works for you, and never engage another human being…right? Well, sort of. You may not know it, but there are many things about online learning you can expect to be exactly the same as a brick-and-mortar school:

  • You will have homework, and probably lots of it!
  • You will be challenged—“Online University” does not mean “easy”!!
  • You will use real textbooks, not just e-texts.
  • You will complete your work to meet regular deadlines.
  • You can expect to engage with your fellow students regularly online—no sitting in the back of the classroom!

Okay, so maybe not as freeform as you imagined. But hold on—there are tons of things about online learning that you might not have expected and will probably love!

  • You will learn to be self-motivated and independent—you’ll be driven by your own goals and expectations, not that of a professor you barely know in a class of 300.
  • Learning resources, communities, e-texts, etc. will be available 24/7, so you should be able to fit study time into your schedule conveniently. Take that laptop to soccer practice!
  • You will not feel alone! You will have access to support via mentoring or advising (depending on your University), online learning communities, and many resources at the touch of a mouse-button.
  • The only distractions to your learning will be those that you allow—no more noisy students bothering you from the back of the class or paper airplanes flying down the aisles. You can create your own study oasis.
  • Academic authenticity is a top priority. Use of technology allows online institutions to closely monitor students’ work to ensure its originality.

If your school has similar policies to that of WGU, you will be able to accelerate your studies to move at your own pace (within parameters), and use your knowledge and experience to move through your assessments much quicker than if you had to log “seat time” at a traditional institution.

It takes a dedicated individual to succeed in a solely-online educational environment. But with the right attitude and expectations, online learning really can be the perfect way to fit a degree into your life.

(Also contributing to this post was Catherine Endicott, a Mentor for the Teacher’s College at WGU).