Tips for Taking Classes and Studying Online at Home
Time Management:
- Create a daily schedule; consider modelling it on your previous timetable.
- Work in small, manageable chunks.
- Take breaks from the computer every 20 minutes: stretch, look out the window, walk around.
- Plan out all your upcoming deadlines, and work on each upcoming assignment, project, etc. in little bits each day
- Consider keeping the same hours as you would when you’re at school.
Space Considerations:
- Have a dedicated study space, and fill it with all the supplies you need, like a computer, paper, etc.
- Set boundaries with anyone sharing your living space. Let them know when you’re available or not for socializing, etc. Post a copy of your schedule so everyone can see it.
Study Skills:
- Review your course syllabus for the main theme of each lecture.
- When listening to an online lecture or reading online notes, connect all of the information back to the original main theme.
- After reading a set of notes or listening to an online lecture, summarize the main points for yourself.
- View your remote lecture in smaller chunks with breaks if it is hard to remain focused.
- Make sure to look away from the screen periodically to avoid eye strain.
- Write and edit your discussion forum answers in Word or Google Docs before posting so you have an opportunity to clean up errors.
Remote Class Participation:
- Reflect on your audience & purpose before speaking:
- Who is your audience?
- What does your audience need?
- What information is essential?
- Focus on what and how the listener needs to hear the message.
- Define your purpose:
- To report
- To ask
- To influence
- To explain
- Determine the expected outcome for the listener:
- To learn
- To answer
- To reflect
- To take action
- Listening attentively:
- Count to 3 after the talker stops speaking before starting to speak.
- Summarize the speaker’s comments in your own words.
- Restate a speaker’s comment in the form of a question.
- Acknowledge the speaker’s words (do not make assumptions about feelings).
Writing emails:
- Use simple direct sentence structure.
- Use topic-specific vocabulary.
- Define the vocabulary if required.
Plain Language Association International. (2020, March 19). https://plainlanguagenetwork.org/
Plain Language Course - Province of British Columbia. (2020, March 19).
https://www2.gov.bc.ca/gov/content/governments/services-for-government/policies-procedures/web-content-development-guides/writing-for-the-web/plain-language-guide/plain-language-course
Plain Train: Plain Language Online Training. (2020, March 19). https://plainlanguagenetwork.org/
Queen’s University, Student Academic Success Services. (2020, March 12). Online Learning. https://sass.queensu.ca/online-learning/
University of Virginia, Total Advising. (2020, March 12). Distance Learning Help: Success as a Work-from-Home Student. https://advising.virginia.edu/resources/coronavirus-homestudy/