Educational DVDs for an Intensive Online Experience
Getting through an online education has its tradeoffs. The child may have full autonomy with the way you study and even with your class schedule preference, and he or she can also stay mobile while learning. But online high school education should still follow even a semblance of standard and order, and all too often the offered subjects have topics which are too tentative and derivative of the basic high school curriculum. In order to address the issue on standardization, online high schools (such as K2 institutions) have offered educational supplements to their online students, the most elaborate of which is the educational DVD.
Educational DVDs take the place of high school modules of instruction, and are usually offered in packages or sets. Each DVD has content which focuses on a specific area of knowledge, and it can be as general or specific as the student’s learning pace requires. Your child can learn middle-school arithmetic in half a day, depending on his or her pace, or review basic topics and media on biology as a supplement to the online instruction. The DVDs are offered in other languages as well, so your child wouldn’t have to fumble with the English language if he or she doesn’t need to.
Educational DVDs afford many advantages both for the student and the parent. They allow a parent more time for temporary chores, for one thing. All of the basics are run through onscreen, succeeded by a natural instructional progression. You can also maximize on the opportunity for learning by throwing in a host of supplemental preoccupations, such as games and laboratory kits, or follow up on the instruction by taking your child on a related field trip. If you have more than one child who’s enrolled in an online high school education, you can mix and match the discs to feel your way around your children’s learning progressions.
The DVDs can also serve as portable classes if you want your child to stay offline for a while, or if you want to fuse the benefits of homeschooling and online methods of education. You may be on a backpacking hike, or you may take a road trip to areas without internet access; educational DVDs are secondary educational tools, apart from firsthand experience. And since the student can replay the lessons over and over until he or she fully understands them, the child’s recall is stronger, and he or she can apply it immediately to related situations.
You can preview the content of most educational DVDs, especially those offered by established educational software manufacturers. These usually have their own online sites which contain short or limited clips of the content, and you can even watch entire sections of the DVD for a limited time. Some take advantage of user-generated media sites (like YouTube) to publish portions of their modules. In case you do want to order a trial version, preview discs are shipped to you after a telephone or email request, usually at the company’s expense. The discs then expire and lock after a certain period.
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I work for an online high school called the American Academy (www.theamericanacademy.com). I like to read articles online just to keep up on what’s going on in the way of alternative learning. While educational DVDs seem like a good idea, I don’t see them replacing online classes anytime soon. If the student has a question about the coursework, who do they talk to? DVDs don’t provide the same student teacher interaction the virtual schools do.