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Techniques to Help e-Learning
By Catherine Franz
e-Learning is doubling yearly. Classes, e-courses, e-books
on how-to and what-to appear by the thousands online weekly.
In-person seminars and workshops are limited to location and
access. e-Learning allows easy access, creation, and
international distribution to a whole new world of experiences
-- negative and positive.
Avid learners now feel like there is a smorgasbord laid out
before them. It’s like having teachers and trainers crowded
into your den. Yet, no sooner do you buy one e-learning
material, start reading, and another enticement grabs your
attention that is suppose to be even better, even grander. The
flow of new material never seems to end -- a high percentage
poorly written.
Online learning is now starting its climb up the product
maturity bell curve. This means that buyer’s dollars are
voting, demanding, more well thought-out and written material.
As an avid on-line reader, I let out a deep sigh of relief and
look forward for this next wave to occur across the board.
Studying on a computer screen requires different uses of
the mind and eyes. Normally we read in a scanning method when
browsing the Net. Now, with studying, reading will require
more deliberate and careful. This increases material
understanding, comprehension, critical evaluation and
practical application.
Adults who have been away from educational studying for
awhile, will need to review again the scope of skills needed
to study again. Ones they learned back in school. For some
just thinking about studying again makes them crawl under the
bed covers. Those with less break time since their studying
days, the skills will return much quicker. If good study
skills were not previously learned, there will be some
struggle or frustration that might be experiences while
learning the correct methods and creating new habits. For them
it will be like creating a cake from scratch instead from a
package mix.
Note taking
Save your printer ink. Don't print out the material, rely
on your notes and your memory. Taking ink-created notes is
just as important with e-Learning as in any other type of
learning environment. Yes, I did recommend using good old ink
and paper. Note taking isn't just set aside because the
learning material is online. Taking handwritten notes is a key
element in moving new short-term information into long-term
accessibility.
If you would like to have a checkpoint or a measuring stick
on what you are retaining, take note taking to the next level.
You will want to preview the material, as mentioned next, then
begin reading and taking notes. After this, take a break,
return, and then type up your notes. While you are typing add
information that you remember from the material or what you
have learned from other sources. Add whatever is swirling in
your mind. This is best way to measure what you have retained
and what is still missing. If there is something in your notes
that doesn't make sense, then you will know what you need to
reread and start the process again within that smaller scope.
You can even ask further in-depth questions (see below).
Preview
Review and scan all the material. If the material is large,
scan the entire area, then return to one smaller section at a
time and chunk it. Read titles, subheadings, and spend a few
extra minutes on any diagrams or memory aids. Look for
patterns in the material. If the material is well-written you
will always discover one or more patterns. Patterns help
mind-visual-understanding associations. Is there a quick
summary at the end of each chapter? If yes, read this during
your preview. Previewing is important whether the new material
feels comfortable or is stretching you.
When previewing follow ideas and major concepts more
closely rather than words. Let titles and heading provide
clues and guidance. If the author is playing cutesy with the
headings — the title doesn't match the contents--rewrite the
headings so that they fit something that can help your memory.
By reading the introductory and concluding paragraphs
first, you will also be able to calculate what you're reading
pace will need to be, how much time you will need to set
aside, and the amount of effort.
Environment
Take special care of your eyes when reading from the
computer screen. Take frequent eye breaks by refocusing them
on some object far away. If your eyes are bothering you, there
are special computer reading eye drops available. If you wear
bifocals, ask your eye doctor or the lens manufacturer to
raise the starting line to accommodate computer use. This will
also stop neck strain caused by the slight movement of up and
down to align the bifocal line so that you can read the
screen. Bless the doctor who told me about this. This
adjustment removed the neck pain since.
Don't slouch. Frequently it is easy to lower shoulders and
neck. This occurs most often when the monitor is not at the
ideal position -- eye level. This also adds tension to the
neck and shoulders resulting in muscle cramping. If you tilt
the screen up, at a higher angle, where the screen’s center
points toward your nose, you will reduce tension and cramping.
Pace
We tend to assume that our reading pace remains the same
for Net browsing and for e-Learning. Not true. e-Learning
requires the same flexibility as if you are reading a book.
The pace depends on reading skills, type of material, and the
quality of its presentation. Allow your pace to change
depending on the information. Let go of comparing how long it
takes when you read it in printed form vs. online form. Allow
flexibility in study time until you learn to gage the material
with your own level.
Questions
Allow your inquisitiveness to be open while studying.
Record questions that appear within your thoughts. A great way
to expand or answer the question is to write the question on
the top of a blank page. Set a timer for 7 to 10 minutes and
write fast anything that shows up. At the end of the writing,
write a summary sentence or two of what you wrote.
Did your free write answer the question? If not, you may
want to continue through a few more timed exercises. Or let it
go for the moment, return to your studying, and add it to your
research list. Free writing is always a great way to access
deeper meaning being stored in your subconscious.
The most important key to any type of learning is to find
your own rhythm and stride and have fun with the whole
process. Retention is best absorbed while relaxed, open and
curious.
Catherine Franz is a Marketing & Writing Coach, niches,
product development, Internet marketing, nonfiction writing
and training. Additional Articles:
http://www.abundancecenter.com blog:
http://abundance.blogs.com
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