Posts Tagged ‘Few Days’

Pros and Cons of Home Study Distance Learning Courses

March 8th, 2010



Have you been looking into improving your education but can’t quite decide whether a distance learning home study course or evening classes at a nearby college would be best for you. You will get a whole raft of both positive and negative opinions from whomever you ask.

Rumours are rife that so called distance learning schools are nothing more than well organised scams designed to separate gullible people from their cash. You will often hear that employers do not consider the diplomas that they offer, to be a genuine qualification While there is some truth in statements like these, you will be surprised at just how often these ideas turn out to be nothing more than urban legends.

So, let us separate the wood from the trees so to speak.


No doubt, you have read stories about politicians or prominent business people who have paid good money for their higher education degrees from a diploma mill. The story becomes the main topic of conversation on the TV and in the newspapers for a few days and then it is back to business as usual. Although this does happen from time to time, more often than not, this is not the case.

Finding out if the distance learning institution has accreditation is the most important thing to establish early on. Degrees and diplomas from accredited institutions are readily accepted by employers as legitimate. Ultimately, unless you tell them otherwise, the employer will not know that you obtained your diploma via an online training course. All he knows is that you successfully completed all the required requirements for your degree. There is nothing printed on the diploma and more often than not the employer will not ask to see it anyway.

Something else that you may think or have been told about distance learning is that it is easier than sitting in a classroom. This is simply not true. If you don’t have the required self-discipline needed for distance learning, you may in fact find home study more difficult. At the end of the day, the course is going to cover the same material whether you study at home or in a classroom. That is what academic accreditation is there for.

In any case, your assigned instructor plays a crucial role in how well you do as well as how much and how fast you learn. With that in mind, you should make a point of finding out all you can about the tutors involved with the distance-learning program. Their history and reputation should give you a good idea how well you might do.

Can credits be transferred from one school to another?


If you have started a distance learning program and want to move to a new school, you should be able to take earned credits with you. Once again, accreditation is the key. On the assumption that both your distance learning institution and your new school are both accredited, your official transcript will go through the same review process. Although some credits may not transfer, most will. As already pointed out, it is very much in your own interests to do as much research as possible before embarking on a distance learning course.

How much quicker will I complete my degree course with distance learning?

It all depends on the type of person you are and your own personal learning pace. Home study allows you the advantage of learning at your own speed rather than the set pace of classroom tuition. If something is easy for you then go ahead and breeze through it. Ultimately, you are the one that is in control.

By: Alan Kenyon

How To Self-Study For the LSAT

November 3rd, 2009



If you plan to prepare for the LSAT by book, ensure that you go slowly and understand all points thoroughly, just as you would for a university course textbook. You should plan to spend two to six months preparing for the LSAT. Do five 35-minute study sessions (with one ten-minute break after the third sessions) every other day for all LSAT preparation time. This parallels the timing for the actual LSAT, and will help you build the mental endurance needed for the LSAT.

First

Gain a basic understanding of logical reasoning. If you have not taken a basic logical reasoning course, either do so, or read a logical reasoning book such as Richard Feldman’s Reason & Argument, although Chapters One through Seven, Nine, and Ten are sufficient for the LSAT in that particular book. Obtaining logical reasoning skills is arguably the most important part of LSAT preparation. Without a basic foundation, you will likely have great difficulty with the LSAT. Working through the suggested chapters of Feldman’s Reason & Argument should take you about one month, if you do five 35-minute study sessions every other day.

Second

Work through the preparation material (not the former tests, i.e., LSAT PrepTests) provided by Law Services. Visit Law Services Downloadable Forms at http://www.LSAC.org. Scroll down to ‘LSAT Preparation: Sample Questions With Explanations’ and click on the link to view/download. The material is somewhat short, and will likely only take you a few days to work through.

Third

Most likely you will also wish to complete a commercial preparation book that provides an overview of all LSAT sections. Pick a single book and stick with it.

Fourth

Work through real, former LSAT tests and focus on your pacing (how many questions you will attempt), timing (how much time you will spend per question, game, or passage), and review each question afterwards, whether you got the question correct or incorrect. Take your time to ensure that you fully understand each question and exactly why choices are correct or incorrect. Do not make the mistake of taking plenty of tests with superficial review. Do not confuse quality and quantity — It’s better to take one test and fully review it than to take ten tests with minimal review. Remember that the LSAT is a standardized test and you will see similar material each time.

Law Services provides LSAT PrepTest 20 (October 1996) free for download. To download the test, visit Law Services Downloadable Forms at http://www.LSAC.org. Scroll down to ‘Complete Sample LSAT’ and click on the link to download. After download you may view and print the test.

What NOT To Do

Purchase used books from a student who took a live LSAT preparation class. Even if the student took copious notes, the text is still not designed for self-study.

Try to cram. The LSAT is a skills test, not a knowledge test. You must develop your logical reasoning and LSAT test-taking skills over time to achieve your maximum score potential. I suggest a minimum of two months for LSAT preparation, but three to four months is probably ideal. Over four months may be necessary, but should be avoided to keep you from getting bored and frustrated.

By: Michael W. Stone