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What are the differences between online college courses and in-school classes?

| October 12, 2024 | 5 Comments
College It Courses
by California Cthulhu (Will Hart)

Question by guitarist_147: What are the differences between online college courses and in-teach classes?
do they cost the same? do you still get credits? does it take the same amount of time to complete the class? how do you “take” an online class?, like, how does it work? can you take more than one at a time? how do you take tests and do assignments? and what are the hours and do you need a webcam?

Best answer:

Answer by hopefully86
It really depends on what online teach you attend. I take classes online, and it expenditure less than a four year university physically going to class. You basically have to sign in a couple times a week, and you have to be very excellent at studying on your own and time management. You can choose to take a few at a time, but it depends on the teach also. Some fantastic online Universities are Devry, Ashford, AIU online, etc. I haven’t needed a webcam yet, most likely just for speech or debate classes.

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  1. jellybeanchick says:

    I will assume that you mean online classes taken from an otherwise normal campus, like a community college or an qualified university.

    Online classes cost the same and have the same credits as traditional classes. Online classes *may* take more time, because the lack of lectures is made up for with required participation in the class forum and more assignments. But, because it is online you can do it at hours that are convenient to you. You can take as many online classes as you would take traditional classes, and all you need is an internet connection - I have never heard of one that needs a webcam.

    I have taken an online course from a community college, and I know other people who have as well. The general complex of the class is that every week there is a module. The module will have some required reading and some “address notes.” Each module, there will be some kind of message board prompt. It may possibly be anything from “What do you reckon in this area x” to a small research project. You not only have to respond to that prompt, but you must also answer to other student’s responses. Additionally, there may be some written assignments that are submitted to the professor via the website. There are quizzes, and a couple midterms and a closing. All quizzes and tests have to be open book, so the questions are harder than they would be in a traditional class. The midterm and closing are timed, and may have a random order of questions so that you can’t work as a group. I have seen a few online classes that require a group project.

  2. OIAMAQT says:

    Each teach is uncommon on the pricing, you have to just question. If it is an qualified college you will get credits if you take a credit course. The time depends on the teach as well, most are the same amount of weeks, but you can usually view your hw and everything for the whole semester to get ahead start and end sooner. An online class is usually on a internet thing called blackboard, it is very simple to figure out. You can take as many as the teach allows. Certain teachers require you to take the tests with a proctor, there is a list of several people that will qualify as proctors, then you go to their facility and they watch you take the test. Other tests are usually multiple choice, and timed so you have to study bc you don’t have much time to look up answers. Hours are what you make them, depends on the class if you need a webcam..odds are you won’t.

    I did my senior year of college through completely online courses, I was working 40hrs a week, and may possibly not squeeze in teach classes, so I took 20 hours online. You have to be self motivated to get onto the notebook everyday and tell yourself to go to class. I really loved it bc of my schedule and I may possibly work ahead. I have a college degree, and nowhere on my transcripts does it say I did it online, so you don’t have to worry in this area employers thinking oh well she just went to teach online. Excellent Luck!

  3. Johnny J says:

    -Usually online courses will be significantly cheaper than classes taken on a college campus.
    -The time it takes depends on how much work per week you are required to do for the class, but in most cases it is the same amount of time that it would take to complete an in teach class.
    -The credit for an online class is the same as you would recieve on a college campus. BUT, if you plot on transferring this credit to a college or university, you will need to make sure that it transfers accurately before taking the class.
    -For the online classes I took, I had to buy a textbook to read, complete online quizzes and homework assignments, and take a few online tests throughout the semester. The best part of this is that everything is open-note and open-book. The homework, tests, and quizzes are all taken on a website that is designed for the class. You will have a username and password that you use to log into the website.
    -I’d say that I spent significantly less time with my online classes than I did with my in teach classes. I would plot to spend around 5-8 hours a week working on the class.
    -You will most likely NOT need a webcam.

  4. Tekka says:

    It depends on where you’re taking the class and what kind of class it is. At my college, it expenditure the same as a normal class and you get the same amount of credits upon completion. Some online credit hours aren’t counted for various kinds of transfer students for example. Transfering health check students can be required to retake a class in person if the teach doesn’t believe that an online class may possibly properly teach a class they took.

    An online class can take more or less time depending on who the professor is. Last semester I took a 3 credit hour online Way of life class. It finished up taking more time than a 4credit hour math class and a 3credit hour sociology class combined! That was really the fault of the professor more than anything else. I busted by butt in that class and was one of the few to pass it.

    Most colleges use something called Blackboard for online classes. It is a honestly simple to use system that can be set up to be used by professors in uncommon ways. Most set up their online classes to have forums, quizzes and various tests and lectures that you read as part of the class. Some kinds of classes use uncommon software that might involve webcams, videos, and audio lectures for instruction. It really depends on the kind of class, the teach and the professor though.

    You can nearly always take more than one at a time. You have to be careful though, many online classes are just as hard as in person classes and in some cases harder.

    The hours? Well it really depends on the professor. Most require assignments to be submitted by midnight in a certain time zone on a fixed basis. Many professors who teach online classes tend to be lenient though. They’ll overlook missed deadlines or extend deadlines because they know many people who take their classes don’t have the amount of free time that many young full time college students have.

  5. Burglary B says:

    May be this site can help you
    http://www.sgpak.com

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