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By signing up with CADLore.com you can find useful CAD Tutorials.
Please, find some useful information regarding Tutorials over the
Internet in general below.
Online tutoring refers to the process by which knowledge is imparted
from a tutor, knowledge provider or expert to a student or knowledge recipient
over the Internet. Online tutoring has been around almost as long as the
Internet and takes the following form:
Tutoring via email and knowledge content
In this mode, the tutor or knowledge provider creates knowledge content in a
very structured and methodical manner. The student accesses this knowledge at
their own time and pace. Interaction between the tutor and the student may be
via email. In addition, tests and quizzes may be taken and submitted by the
student and returned graded with feedback by the tutor.
Real-time tutoring over Internet
With increased bandwidth students and tutors can now engage online at the same
time as in a physical classroom. With additional technology tools the tutor can
present material on their computer to the student and students and tutors may
work on the material on a "whiteboard" at the same time. The
whiteboard is the equivalent of a physical classroom blackboard and allows the
tutor to write and generate illustrations in real-time. Real-time tutoring
typically contains both audio and video devices. A variation of the real-time
tutoring is the use of online chat and instant messaging by the tutor to
interact in real-time with students. Though online tutoring without audio or
video is substantially different than online tutoring with real time audio and
video, it can be effective particularly if students have older computers,
computers connected to the Internet via dial-up modems, or if they use shared
computers as in a library or other shared space.
A good online tutoring strategy may incorporate both forms of online knowledge
delivery for effective and lower cost knowledge delivery.
Online Tutoring Procedures
From the above description, it might appear that online tutoring may be a
direct mirror of age-old physical tutoring procedures. However, there are
subtle differences in both the approach and the delivery of online tutoring:
Unlike face-to-face or physical tutoring where traditionally, tutors are used
to writing on a blackboard, online tutoring requires additional preparation of
course material so that it is delivered faster to the student, typing into the
whiteboard. This is because it is still more challenging to use the mouse to
write compared to using chalk on a blackboard. A good modus operandi is
to prepare the course materials as slides and then use the white board to
illustrate and emphasize aspects of the material as the lesson proceeds. This
also means that online tutoring might waste less time.
Since tutoring is usually on one computer - the tutor's computer – the tutor
has greater responsibility to regulate access to the whiteboard and even access
to speak to the class. In fact, it is a good idea to keep online tutoring
classes very small when a lot of interaction is required.
Attendees are in remote locations and tutors direct access to demand attention.
As a result, online tutoring might be more difficult for tutoring younger
children or those with little attention span unless there is additional adult
presence, such as the parents, with the student.
Online Tutoring Requirements
The requirements for online tutoring may include:
Broadband Internet access.Real-time online tutoring using both voice and
screen-sharing applications requires a significant amount of bandwidth. A
minimum connection speed of 128 kbit/s or higher is recommended - dial-up
access may slow down (latency) the process and frustrate both the tutor and
student.
Audio microphone and speaker or a headset containing both
A shared screen, on which the student and the tutor can write is important for
effective teaching. This can be done through the use of collaborative software
popularly called a "white board "
For writing, drawing and highlighting text, a digital pen mouse will be very
useful especially while learning Math or languages other than English. Student
can write freely instead of using the mouse.
A web cam or digital video camera may be required if physical demonstration or
visual feedback is required.
If voice and particularly video are not required, many of the technical requirements
listed above can be significantly reduced or eliminated.
Online Tutoring Services
An online tutoring service should consist of the following components:
Video and audio in real time. Video is essential so that visual feedback
essential to learning is present and audio for ease-of-use without additional
phone bills and inconvenience of dealing with two separate devices. Online
audio is typically based on VOIP which is a mature technology and is being used
for real phone sevices (Skype, Vonage). There are four tiers of online tutoring
services - those with real-time audio and video incorporated in their
technology, those using public domain set ups such as MSN Messenger with less
central coordination, those who implement online tutoring as a keyboard chat
room with no audio or video, and those without any online tutoring component.
Tutors are validated or are employees. When tutors are not validated and simply
pay the service to operate as tutors, there is no central check to ensure the
quality and authenticity of tutoring, or ascertain security for the child
student.
Affordable. Many online tutoring services are prohibitively expensive.
Should include all components of learning - instructional, demonstrative,
collaborative, and individual research. Instructional and demonstrative is by
tutors; collaborative through online discussion or chat group with peers;
individual research includes teaching materials, quizzes, etc. that is
available to students separate from the online instructional component.
Should emphasize some level of online security for students and tutors.
Colleges or Universities that want to increase retention and graduation rates
for their students and particularly for their online students may wish to
provide online tutoring. Colleges and Universities typically already have
tutors on staff for in-person tutoring. Institutions of higher learning may
create their own systems to provide online tutoring or purchase ready made
systems for use with their own tutors.
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