Not being ties to a physical classroom has quite a few perks – it’s more flexible, convenient and usually way less expensive!  But despite this, it can also be a bit challenging at first. However, that shouldn't stop you from taking full advantage of the opportunity it gives to pursue higher education, upskill, or shift career fields.
In this article, we’re giving you a few invaluable tips and tricks that will greatly improve your online learning experience.
Treat Your Online Education As You Would An In-Person One
The shift from a desk and blackboard to a laptop or monitor is the first thing you’ll notice. So the best way to deal with this is to treat your online learning experience like any other. That means creating and sticking to a schedule and managing your time so that neither your studies, hobbies, nor relationships get neglected.
Calendar and planner apps are perfect for this. Once you have the syllabi and structure of your courses, you can create an overarching schedule and keep fine-tuning a manageable weekly workload. Be sure to focus on any deadlines and work on deliverables in time to avoid crunch.
Attend Your Classes!
Some online classes are structured in a way that lets students advance at their own pace. However, those that mimic a traditional classroom environment have a fixed timetable. Missing a class or two in a semester won't be the end of the world, but any more and you risk not understanding critical material as the instructor goes over it and falling behind.
Create a Dedicated Study Space
Where you study can significantly impact how effective you are. Did you know that your bed is among the
worst possible study places? Create a dedicated nook instead, whether it’s a space at the kitchen table or a seat in a quiet room at the local library.
Make sure you have access to natural light and are free from real-world distractions. Keep plenty of water and some snacks handy for those hours-long study sessions.
Eliminate Distractions
A lack of physical oversight makes it far too easy to leave a lecture in the background while you browse social media or do something equally unproductive or distracting. Clear your head and catch up on current events or with friends before class starts. If you’re having trouble staying off your socials, consider installing distraction-blocking apps on your devices to develop greater discipline.
Protect Your Online Safety
Having access to a mass of learning resources from anywhere is a blessing. But remember that being careless about how you connect to the internet can be risky. So take time to learn more about
what cybersecurity is and the threats you may come across online.
For example, you could be in the habit of connecting to the internet through public Wi-Fi. Well, for learning management systems or other study-related services, this is a bad idea, because public networks have minimal (consider it ZERO) security precautions and are vulnerable to all sort of attacks. These attacks allow hackers to capture and misuse your personal and financial data, lock you out of your accounts, and commit identity fraud.
There are the
best free VPNs available if you must connect through public Wi-Fi or other networks you don’t trust. The VPN will enclose the connection in an encrypted tunnel, shielding it from snoops and hackers alike. They’ll realize the connection is more active but won't be able to track what sites you’re visiting or intercept the files or sensitive information you share.
Hone Your Problem-Solving Skills
The adage that
freedom comes with responsibility (Eleanor Roosevelt, if you're asking) also applies to online learning. Being a learner is the perfect opportunity - and, we'd say, responsibility - to develop your independent problem-solving and research skills.
So build up a digital library of tools and resources to make studying easier. Get to know more about your devices on a technical level so you can do basic troubleshooting. And of course, develop your skills on Google – as well as AI platforms like ChatGPT, Gemini and Claude – which will serve you well, long after classes are done.
Don’t Hesitate to Seek Help
Independence will get you far, but sometimes it’s easier and more productive to reach out to the right people instead. It’s your instructors’ job to help you; most will be thrilled to do so. Look up their office hours and connect with them whenever you don’t understand something.
Your classmates are another invaluable resource. Some might live half the world away, but you’re all in this together. So use online study sessions to benefit from learning from others – and maybe teaching them a bit, too.
So, just a quick wrap-up here, but we’ve found that many people find the move to online learning to be a bit harder than they expected. We hope that this article will ease the transition, and make the enormous benefits of learning online to be much more accessible.
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