Receiving lectures (online education)
Contact with your teacher and with other students is conducted primarily through the use of email, bulletin boards and chat rooms.
Using email and Web pages will probably be the most convenient and fastest way for you to transmit and receive materials from your instructor and your peers. Most lecture materials are transmitted via Web pages in online education. Instructors prepare their materials and post them to the Web well in advance of your class assignments. Once the initial Web page has been posted, it varies from instructor to instructor as to how updates or continued materials are distributed.
Some will regularly update their Web pages throughout the term of a course. Others will provide updates by emailing them to their students, and still others will send them via the postal service. No matter how updates are transmitted, it is important for you to take responsibility for receiving them.
If you already use a word processor, you will be accustomed to reading text on screen and should know how to scroll up and down pages. Reading Web pages for lecture materials or assignments is no different. They are usually presented as text and pictures. In addition to your scroll bars, you can also use the page up and page down keys to move through the material one screen at a time. The reading style you employ may also determine which method of scrolling you use.
Some Web pages may also contain animations and sound. Depending on how those pages are developed, you may be required to download certain browser plug-ins (e.g. Real Audio, Shockwave, or Acrobat Reader). It is also possible that lecture materials will be available as a file to download to your computer. (For example, a Microsoft Word™ document, a spreadsheet template, or a Microsoft PowerPoint™ presentation.) Instructions for downloading information and/or installing free browser plug-ins to your computer are available in your browser documentation.
