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Author Topic: Online Learning  (Read 31942 times)
jvano123
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« Reply #45 on: October 20, 2010, 01:07:03 AM »

Infopri and others:

Noted for the "local" proofreader.....just that it is sometimes inconvenient with deadlines looming. I think it may be about the same (possibly) in time expended to get someone to redline it (either way). It has been my limited experience that the online readers won't do the entire document and will give general help only. Can't win either way..... student writing and proofreading skills are necessary for higher ed classwork.
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infopri
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When all else fails, let us agree to disagree.


« Reply #46 on: October 20, 2010, 01:11:56 AM »

student writing and proofreading skills are necessary for higher ed classwork.

Would that this were true.  Alas, too many of my school's students are admitted without these skills (or the willingness to use them, which amounts to much the same thing).
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Your experience is not universal. Words to live by.

MYOB.  Y enseņen bien a sus hijos.
infopri
I guess I'm now a VERY
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When all else fails, let us agree to disagree.


« Reply #47 on: October 29, 2010, 11:26:16 AM »

Didn't you forget your spamlink, sharonrice?
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Your experience is not universal. Words to live by.

MYOB.  Y enseņen bien a sus hijos.
jvano123
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« Reply #48 on: October 30, 2010, 03:48:35 PM »

Infopri and others:

My daughter just finished her BS at a private brick and mortar. She was amazed that the University required a "study skills" class for freshman. I guess the  high school exit standards are lowering for students entering higher ed. with respect to reading, writing, and even organizing? Sad..... What happened to the ACT and SAT exams?

I could say, however, that my daughter was "ready" as opposed to others. We "homeschooled" her. She landed 3 separate scholarships that gave her a full ride, graduating summa cum laude--top 1 percent. Not the norm? What do we do about the incoming freshman without the skills? Is homeschool the answer?
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infopri
I guess I'm now a VERY
Distinguished Senior Member
*****
Posts: 18,463

When all else fails, let us agree to disagree.


« Reply #49 on: October 30, 2010, 05:28:02 PM »

Infopri and others:

My daughter just finished her BS at a private brick and mortar. She was amazed that the University required a "study skills" class for freshman. I guess the  high school exit standards are lowering for students entering higher ed. with respect to reading, writing, and even organizing? Sad..... What happened to the ACT and SAT exams?

I could say, however, that my daughter was "ready" as opposed to others. We "homeschooled" her. She landed 3 separate scholarships that gave her a full ride, graduating summa cum laude--top 1 percent. Not the norm? What do we do about the incoming freshman without the skills? Is homeschool the answer?

I don't work in K-12, so I can't address what's going on in K-12 districts or in our students' homes that might account for what I'm seeing in the classroom.  It sounds as though homeschooling was a good choice for your daughter (congratulations on her accomplishments!), but that's not a perfect answer either, as in many cases it does not work well, for a variety of reasons.

I do have some private theories about how students' priorities have changed, as well as the culture in which they are growing up, in ways that might affect both their study skills (and writing skills) and their motivation to learn, but these are just my own hunches, with no research to back them up.  I'm sure there is research out there, though, if anyone who works or does research in the K-12 field wants to jump in and tell us about it.
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Your experience is not universal. Words to live by.

MYOB.  Y enseņen bien a sus hijos.
egilson
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« Reply #50 on: October 31, 2010, 10:19:46 AM »

Excuse me while I successfully resist the urge to mention some online learning you can do on my website.  Um, well, to give the URL...

Giving the URL of your commercial site in your signature is a bad idea. From the CHE Forum moderators' "What are the posting rules?" post in the "Questions, Comments?" forum:

Quote
Posting spam of any kind in a post or in your signature line (whether it's commercial spam or an attempt to use the forums to sell or promote your books, Web site, etc.) will result in an immediate ban.
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To anyone who is not a blockhead, all the sciences are interesting. - Marc Bloch
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