Staying Focused During Studying For Online Classes

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One of the most common difficulties that online college students have, besides not being disciplined enough to study and do their work on time, is staying focused on their studying during study time. Sometimes it’s your own attention wandering (no matter how hard you try to stay focused, and how determined you are to do your work ahead of time), and sometimes it’s other people.

Attending an online class goes along the same principals that freelance workers encounter: when you’re home all the time, your family and friends may assume your study time is actually free time. They may not look at your work — in this case, your homework — as something “real” and “valid” because you don’t attend the class in person, and so they won’t leave you be during studying time.

In other cases, your own self-discipline seems to be the problem. Not a lack of self-discipline — too much of it. While some people respond well to urging themselves to finish their work until they do it, others may truly desire to do their work, but the harder they push themselves the more of a block they seem to create to them actually completing the work. This latter group, not surprisingly, are the majority, and also the ones who tend to be the biggest procrastinators.

To stay focused while studying, turn off all other distractions, such as your cell phone, instant messengers, television, and any internet windows not related to your homework. Then relax, maybe put on some music, and just look at the assignment for what it is: one little assignment. You can do it in no time.

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Is Online School Good For Grades 1-12?

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When people talk about attending school online, they almost always mean online college or university. What the average person may not know is that online classes are offered by many different schools for grades 1 through 12 as well. Online schooling is very helpful for children who have long-term illnesses or a serious disability, as well as those who live somewhere remote and cannot reach a school campus in-person to attend classes.

These are cases where online school has an obvious superiority over traditional in-person school, though; some parents also enroll their child in online schooling to prevent bullying, peer pressure and the like. This is less about necessity about more about preference, and it brings to light the question of whether online schooling is good for kids.

Online classes, while great for college students who would be doing a similar style of book learning even in their in-person classes, lack the hands-on and interactive qualities that many younger children need in order to maintain interest in the subject they are learning about. Also, the first few grades of school are important times to develop social skills by interacting with other children, and with teachers.

On the other hand, online school allows children who would spend most of their time being bullied or worrying that other kids might not like them to instead focus on their schoolwork, so it’s a situation with both pros and cons. It seems like a compromise is the best solution: enroll your child in book learning courses, such as math, online, and physical courses like art and sports in-person for a good healthy balance of quality learning time and socializing.

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