Home learning was once a rarity but, since Covid-19, most young people have had some online learning experience, and many have found that they actually prefer this method of study.
Several online academies or schools are now looking to the future and offering students the opportunity to learn remotely.
If you feel that the larger classes of traditional colleges aren’t for you or your child or you’ve simply got on better with your studies from a home environment, this might be a way to get the qualifications offered by colleges, such as A-levels, without having to attend in person.
Here are just a few of the benefits that online learning offers.
1. Flexibility
One advantage of an online education is the flexibility it brings. While you do have to put in a certain amount of work, much like remote working there’s more choice about how and when you put in your hours.
If you work best first thing in the morning or late at night, you can choose to do some of your work then, rather than at the precise moment the lesson takes place.
It also means you can ‘pick and mix’ when it comes to where you study. You may decide you want to do one or two A-levels in a classroom face-to-face and do a couple more remotely.
What parents say
“My son has always been home-educated. He’s doing three GCSEs a year early at the moment. We’ve used an online course for one of them and I had to arrange the exam centre myself. The other two he’s doing through a local college.”
2. A greater range of options
Because students aren’t limited to the classes available at their local college, online learning can also be an opportunity to branch out and find courses they actually want to study.
Students can go at their own pace and make the most of a quieter learning environment with the knowledge that they have a teacher behind them to ensure they’re always achieving to the best of their ability. Extracurricular activities are usually also offered for a rounded education and to help students get to know their peers better.
What parents say
“Online A-Levels are bound to become more popular as the technology gets better. Covid just boosted what was happening anyway.”
3. The ability to learn at your own pace
One of the joys of online learning is being able to go at your own pace, working a bit faster and looking at a topic in more depth when you feel confident, and being able to spend a little more time on the things you find tricky.
At online schools, some of the learning is done by watching videos so you can stop and rewind in a way you can’t in a live lesson. And there are always tutors to ask individually if you need something explained in a different way.
What parents say
“Teaching is a very much debated issue and there are many different methods. But the fact is, for the past 12 or 13 years, Ofsted have wanted to see less teacher talk and more pupil activity – the idea is that the pupils should be working harder in the classroom than the teacher. Lecture-style live teaching goes against this and often less progress is made as a result. The idea of video lessons where pupils pause them to spend time on their activity at their own pace more mimics the Ofsted approach.”
4. The chance to broaden your social horizons
Some people are put off of a non-traditional learning environment because they worry about the lack of contact with classmates, but that’s all still there with an online course.
In fact, you have the opportunity to meet people from a much wider social circle than you might at a bricks and mortar college – people of different backgrounds and ages, and also people from locations across the country or even the globe.
Having a variety of people in classes with you brings with it lots of learning opportunities as well as the chance to develop the sort of social skills needed for the world of work.
What parents say
“There are independent schools that are fully online. They have opportunities to socialise online as well as real life (optional) meet-ups.”