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Online Education = Lazy?

Randy

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Online education provides students with tons of amenities, at the same time it has deprived them of the extra curricular and other physically proactive facilities that they can only enjoy by enrolling in a traditional institute. Students are usually at home everyday and don't even need to change out of their PJ's to get education. What are your opinions on this? Do you think online education leads to a lazy lifestyle?
 
I don't think it's necessarily lazy. In some cases it can help due to anxiety with new people and whatnot. However, I don't think it's a good idea because of exactly that. When you're worried about meeting people, hoping they like you, etc etc. you eventually learn to suck it up by going to school. You find a few friends, and things turn out okay.

In online classes, you don't have that. You don't make any friends, and you end up being a shut-in with no social skills whatsoever. School is pretty much the first step to becoming a competent member of society, and a large part of that comes from interaction with teachers, who are your peers, and other students, who are your equals. You learn a great deal from school that isn't actually taught. But again, in an online environment, you don't get that.
 
◢Dagger◣ said:
In online classes, you don't have that. You don't make any friends, and you end up being a shut-in with no social skills whatsoever. School is pretty much the first step to becoming a competent member of society, and a large part of that comes from interaction with teachers, who are your peers, and other students, who are your equals. You learn a great deal from school that isn't actually taught. But again, in an online environment, you don't get that.
Pretty much this.

However, it's good that there is such a thing as online education. For some people it might be physically impossible to attend class otherwise. Maybe due to being paralysed or simply living in another country altogether. And for people with severe anxiety disorders this might just be the only way to get any sort of education at all.

As for "extra curricular and other physically proactive facilities", it's not like people are forced to do those anyway. Except for PE in primary and secondary school maybe, but in my experience there wasn't a whole lot to that anyway.
 
Well for me it's a bit of both really. I can see how it's a good thing and a bad thing.

For me, It was required that I attended school in both primary and secondary school, which I did to a rough average of 98% and I had a load of friends and we all had fun but due to the teachers that we all had, none of us were very smart. Our English teacher was a drunk and throughout secondary school our entire English class failed our GCSE's. We had 3 Maths teachers, one of which was Polish and was unable to speak a single work of English, simply had a masters in Maths which resulted in most of the class failing Maths. Our Drama teacher was a known drug taker and was high during most of her lessons which, as you guessed, resulted in a large number of us not knowing what we should do and failed our GCSE's.

Now, this was all done before I had access to the internet, online courses, youtube or websites dedicated to educational information.
Ever since my high school days I'm in University now and have been through college and uni for 5 years. Through those 5 years I've self taught myself Maths, English language and literature, Welsh and how to use computers and have corrected all the wrong and useless information that I was told or was taught in High school with the use of the internet and online courses. Hell, even a party trick of mine is to tell you a cube root of a double digit in a matter of seconds! In school that was an impossibility.

The worse part of all of the above is that I don't live in a run down place that no one cares about, it has respectable reputation that most people have houses, jobs and are middle class. It's just a poor school and is the only one around here.

With all of that being said, we move onto college. During college I was doing a national diploma in computing, which was us required to be in 5 days a week, to which I also did to a 98% attendance and things went great. Out website teacher didn't know HTML, our animation teacher didn't know what flash was (which is what we were required to use), our Welsh BAC tutor was never there for class and our graphic design tutor showed up for class once in every 3 months due to health issues (Not saying he should of been there, just that these circumstances occur and we have no replacements for them). I managed to pass the entire course with the highest grade possible, how? I used online courses and videos to teach me what I needed to know.

I'm not saying that online courses and videos should replace school or anything, I'm simply saying that used next to them they are very helpful. I'm sure everyone gets useless teachers and some teachers have something come up so that they can't help or can't attend their classes so to use something like YouTube or Lynda.com it makes it less damaging and gives you the ability to get that grade everyone deserves and tries to get.

As far as your point of it removing extra curricular activities and such... In primary school, secondary school and college we had none. Other than the football team (Not American football), Rugby and basketball of course. There was no film groups, reading groups, drama groups, woodwork 101, engineering 101 or even groups to meet new students and hang around after school. None of the teachers or lecturers wanted to give that time to supervise them in any way, so we just never had them.

Outside of school there wasn't that much to do either but most of the things around here start at roughly 6 and on so it's not a real issue for having to look into online resources for a lesson and then go to a club or something.
 

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Off Topix is a well-established general discussion forum that originally opened to the public in 2009! We provide a laid-back atmosphere, and our members are down to earth. We have a ton of content, and fresh stuff is constantly being added. We cover all sorts of topics, so there's bound to be something inside to pique your interest. We welcome anyone and everyone to register and become a member of our awesome community.

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