I’m the complete opposite. As a CS major watching the professor live code or discuss 0s and 1s is so mundane that 10 minutes into class I’m dozing off. I’m way more productive when reading the text book or watching CS TH-cam vids.
But ask yourself the question... are you actually doing study during the time the lecture is running? Doing your own revision by reading and watching is just basic revision everyone should be doing. Watching later at 1.5-2x speed because you learn better that way already puts you behind the person who just went to the class at 1x speed, and is now a lecture ahead and is revising while you're just learning. I'm saying this as someone who has 50% of their classes with scores over 90%.
@@islandsociete Thanks for the advice? The way I study is completely dependent on the class, professors, and difficulty. If it’s difficult I read the book, if the class records the lectures I rewatch them to catch anything I may have missed, if the professor isn’t good I read the book, and if the class is straight forward I’ll just study the lectures notes. I have a 3.75GP and all A’s in my classes(as now) which is pretty much expected as a CS major but my grades may or may not slightly drop bc of the level of difficulty of the finals.
I don’t necessarily agree with this. Not everyone will do it the way you did. Everyone has different learning conditions that would be optimal for their learning. Learning not to procrastinate is an important skill too. I didn’t learn that until I went to grad school.
yeah man im doing full time all online right now. dont get me wrong its hard af and a butt ton of reading, but i have all As and im ahead by about a week.
I think if you are watching lectures later at 1.5-2x speed because it's optimal, you are already behind the person who was at class at 1x speed. If you have an optimal learning environment, you can still do that AND go to class. Most people I know skipping lectures are not really studying in that same time.
Some online programs are go at your own pace, so you can fall behind. There are two different types of online classes. One where you have online lectures/meet up times and then asssignemt you submit by the next class. The other is when they post all the lectures pre-recorded, or through a third party software, and you complete the all the assignment by the end of the semester or week by week basis.
Yeah you can't make the blanket statement that you'll barely learn anything, because you can absolutely learn a ton via online lectures. I'm guessing the difference in perception is just a difference in learning styles though.
lol I only went to the classes I needed to, my last semester. It depends on the person and subject honestly. my worst subject is math and I failed by going to every lecture in a 5-credit math course. second time around I taught myself with online videos and passed. I think the main takeaway is that you have to be serious about studying. regardless of whether you show up to lectures or not. work smarter
I excelled by not attending lectures. The two hour spent listening is better spent actively engaging the material. Originally my method required me to use office hours to understand difficult concepts and thankfully i never had to use it. Print lecture slides, reading 20 minutes, Actively engage concepts without taking notes 1h and more, note taking to commit to memory. No flash cards just clear notes. I found it gets easier with time to eventually finishing off 3 lecture's worth of material in one 12 hour work day (exhausting).
Depends on the person. I get burnt out and hate the rigidity of scheduled classes. I much prefer to dedicate hours to a class and get chunks of it done once or twice a week instead of the classic rigid weekly structure. God forbid you get a prof who opens stuff up weekly on an online class.
Personally, my success has been tied to watching the recordings because I can only process technical information properly if I can be dynamic with it, which is to say, rewind and pause. It gives me a chance to pause and think (and therefore understand), and I also get the opportunity to go beyond by writing down actual, deep questions when I pause the video that I then take to in-person office hours. This has been more enriching for me than going in person to see everything the first time in the live atmosphere (rather than the recording) and do a race where you try to take notes fast to catch up with the pace of lecture, hope you magically make sense of the details as it comes and goes, and as a result, be in a position where you have to ask mundane, clarifying questions or, "Can you repeat that again?" rather than deeper questions, AND if you get lost during lecture, have to recoup all that learning loss. This is true EVEN if I read ahead. Why? Because of the extreme technical nature of computer science. And I feel this is why a LOT of learners go on TH-cam to supplement their learning: one, obviously because of the quality of resources, but two, because of the pause-and-replay feature. But I think in-person is best suited for another personality of learners who learn best that way. But I prefer recordings only in technical classes; if it's anything else, I myself prefer in-person. In both cases, though, I agree: discipline is key. But that is true in every walk of life, as long as that walk works for you!
I am the opposite because I always felt like I couldn't pay attention during class due to having to take notes so fast. Video classes were the best because I could rewatch as many times as needed, and everything made more sense.
100% am the same. There are so many like us who prefer videos and recordings but hardly those such people like us write comments stating they do so, but I think it's a lot more common preference than people think
Yep, having the mindset to not skip a single class means that you stay on top of everything, and listening at normal pace means it processes better. Also it means you are more productive. Like if you're watching lectures later on 2-3x speed, then you are already behind the person who already was at the class at 1x speed. Like while you are catching up, they are either already doing tutorial questions, revision, more work on assignments or preparing for next class. They may even be just chilling out like you were doing when you skipped class!
Bro this is not true, I did entire f*king IT degree fully online, Only the exams were physical , yes It might be very hard but sure it's doable. Dedication is the key
As a parent of 3, the online courses were a godsend for me. I learned a lot during that time and never fell behind my studies. Weed out the stuff that isn't important in your life.
Good advice. Speaking as the pot smoker engineer who'd show up to half their classes late while skipping the other half, it took me 9+ years to get an undergrad in chemical engineering after having dropped out of my first college, redo everything at community college, and finally finish university. What I learned was that I was paying for all these courses via loans, which costed literally hundreds of USD per class. College = your time + your money.
Currently wrapped in this exact predicament now. I started off freshman year as a CS major with a concentration in cybersecurity (I want to work as a sys admin, the only other concentration was game dev) and my concentration got cut (it was a liberal arts school, only cheap college in the area) anyway, I transfer to an online school under the cis major but the curriculum is dogshit and doesn't cover any relevant skills for sys admins (active directory, powershell). outside of basic networking. So for the past 2 years I've been either bullshitting or semi-bullshitting these courses.
Couldn't agree more. Im in college right now and skipping classes is an addiction. I'm glad I've learnt, but I'll never be able to fully achieve what I could have
everybody has a different strategy. But I agree with you attending those tech lectures unless prof is boring as hell and he just reads through all presentations
I like hearing this from a computer guy. Seems like a lot of people think online is a better option. I like teaching in-person better than online, myself.
I can’t go to in person classes because of my full time state job… and I can’t quit my full time state job because I am 30 and have to pay my bills and eat and have health insurance… sooooo online is a great option for me!
I'm so glad I'm currently taking all my classes in person when I entered college. I was getting bad grades sophomore year in high school during the pandemic. Worst year in my life!!!!
I failed in Seneca college as international student coz of online lectures, went in person again and got 3.8 gpa but in another in person program. This is real.
For me online lectures suck because they are so boring there is no engagement and lectured are just badly delivered in a monotone voice and they just read what is already on the screen. I literally just go to TH-cam instead.
I learn pretty well with online courses that have no lectures and just a textbook. Requires discipline and ability to teach yourself. Gotta know how you learn
University is all about self discipline, I’m sure they told every student in uni or college in there first year degree on orientation day. The teachers won’t be like high school whooping ur ass, telling you off or sending emails to ur parents or give detention unable to complete to work provided and most of teachers and professors don’t care to teach you but they can specifically tell you the question and guide u like giving dot points of what to write and elaborate more on but won’t help in increasing grade for example if you don’t know how to use excel to create a table or graph with the given data the teachers mostly won’t help or teach you all they say is “watch videos on TH-cam on tutorials” . Personally, I took 2 hour lectures too lightly, I underestimated how much information they provide and how all this information is crucial to provide understanding to assignments, test and exams
How did you measure your learning? How did your professors measure your learning? Do you feel either were accurate? How can you back this up? Or is it just your feeling?
I graduated with a degree in graphic design and my last two years of school were moved to online. I had good grades but I procrastinated soooo much that I barely learned anything. A year has passed and I haven’t found work bc of poor preparation. I ended up going back to school for a higher degree and do go to in person classes again
As a CS student , I can guarantee you! , If you got self discipline and Passion for the computer and off course college marks don't matter you , There is nothing you can't learn by yourself
Never skip classes because u think you can self study. There are many things teachers speak in class outside of the textbook which you will be missing out.
It also depends on how to college did the online courses. Some of them are good. Some of them are very terrible. I was in highschool and canvas online was terrible
would i look dumb if i'll say i was thinking of doing a psych major but i just changed my mind to do computer science .. i am actually scared if i can do it .. PLEASE HELP
I only use online videos as a mean of self learning at home if i still do not understand smth, but i think its better to ask the professor if you have difficulties.
If you're watching lectures later on 2x speed because it's "ideal", then you are already behind the person who already was at the class at 1x speed and is now revising while you are just learning😏
No bro, everything is a habit. I’m getting an online degree and first course was really difficult to be able to concentrate by myself BUT now I’m very productive and I work while I’m on the second year of my bachelors.
Some lecturers just can't teach even though they are really good in that field. for instance, a Chinese person who gets graduated from a top tier university in china teaching you algorithms or database in the UK. it's very hard to understand them. There might be few people who can teach it better than the others but the majority are just not good enough.
Its balance. I think if you dont take anything in person then online would be it for you. My brain changed as i went into college and i need structure.
This isn't a bad take but i think the thing which is missing is this: Why is it important to take offline classes? At University one as a student shouldn't just be focusing to study but to understand and potentially begin their career pathways In an offline setting not only will you be learning but there will (well should ideally be) constant rapport between students and professors about topics being taught creating a good connection between the student and the professor WHICH GOES OUT OF THE WINDOW when running cramming sessions to study, not mentioning how bad it is to cram in a understanding heavy subject like CS But all of this is ofc with the assumption that the professor is able to setup an environment where this kind of activity can happen, if it's a professor who just reads off slides, yeah better just go online and 3x lectures or better yet learn actual content from edutainment channels
I agree going in person is always better if that's available to you. But I think computer science requires a sort of military attitude during the semesters. You really just need to tell everyone, including yourself, this is my life until the semester is over. If you can't hack 15 hour days of study and no weekends it's just not for you.
I completely disagree, you don't have to go in person. Just make sure you keep pace with the class, which you have to do to complete your assignments on time anyways
Yeah nah this doesn't apply to everyone, we all have different ways to effectively absorb knowledge. I have a tendency to lose focus really easily in physical lecture classes, I already knew from the first day it just wasn't going to do it for me. The following classes I had skipped, watched online recordings, practice the exercises and complete assignments given to us, and self-study with the help of online resources and TH-cam, and Istill got a HD for my classes, and this is coming from a Comp Sci major who hates Comp Sci. A word of advice would be to not feel pressured to conform to the norms everyone tells you, find the methods that you're most comfortable with, helps you stay efficient, and produces the best results for you. The only things you need is consistency, self-discipline, and an open mind. Also be sure to take breaks away from your study space :)
Online Degree are cheap it is the future of Education. Infact degrees are obsolete nowadays. You can learning anything online. Skills are important degree is of not use.
my uni is online, I go to virtual uni in pak and the uni is online u only have to go to uni to go for exams , finals and mids, all the lectrures and quizzes are done from home on a learning system
Universities have English requirements for a reason, and is something you are already aware of. The logic of skipping classes still applies, but in your case you have to acknowledge that because of this you really need to improve your English so that you can go to classes. And I assume this is one of the few situations you are actually being immersed in English, so it will similarly improve your English, which to be fair is what will help you get a job in the country where you compete against the locals.
can you please tell me what is actually in computer science ..? i am very scared if i'll be able to do it .. i didn't ave computers as a subject in high school and i am not THAT familiar with computers ...
@@islandsociete I know I also did this when the API first came out. I'm an AI researcher and was into AI. Once the 3.5 API came out I immediately used it to cheat and everything
Even if remote study is an option, I would still choose to go to class. Simply because I want to utilize the school’s billions dollar infrastructure and resources that I paid thousands of dollars for.
or you just take full online and do everything yourself instead of doing remote. That way you do everything when and where you want and learn everything more efficiently
well that was YOUR work ethic being very unbalanced. me on the other hand prefer online classes, and i always stay a week ahead of assignments, so i can practice any additional coding/related concepts on my own time.
You just need a good self-discipline pal. Self-discipline
Computer d/ courses day & bigh
I’m the complete opposite. As a CS major watching the professor live code or discuss 0s and 1s is so mundane that 10 minutes into class I’m dozing off. I’m way more productive when reading the text book or watching CS TH-cam vids.
This late but man😂 I think we the same, do you also learn better self studying?
But ask yourself the question... are you actually doing study during the time the lecture is running? Doing your own revision by reading and watching is just basic revision everyone should be doing. Watching later at 1.5-2x speed because you learn better that way already puts you behind the person who just went to the class at 1x speed, and is now a lecture ahead and is revising while you're just learning. I'm saying this as someone who has 50% of their classes with scores over 90%.
@@islandsociete Thanks for the advice? The way I study is completely dependent on the class, professors, and difficulty. If it’s difficult I read the book, if the class records the lectures I rewatch them to catch anything I may have missed, if the professor isn’t good I read the book, and if the class is straight forward I’ll just study the lectures notes. I have a 3.75GP and all A’s in my classes(as now) which is pretty much expected as a CS major but my grades may or may not slightly drop bc of the level of difficulty of the finals.
I’m almost certain you are the one kid in college with zero Friends and probably the lowest grades
@@Que_tii your cool
I don’t necessarily agree with this. Not everyone will do it the way you did. Everyone has different learning conditions that would be optimal for their learning. Learning not to procrastinate is an important skill too. I didn’t learn that until I went to grad school.
Yeasssss
same here i fall asleep in real classes idk why but when im alone i can focus and actually study none stop
100% agree!
yeah man im doing full time all online right now. dont get me wrong its hard af and a butt ton of reading, but i have all As and im ahead by about a week.
I think if you are watching lectures later at 1.5-2x speed because it's optimal, you are already behind the person who was at class at 1x speed. If you have an optimal learning environment, you can still do that AND go to class. Most people I know skipping lectures are not really studying in that same time.
This is BOGUS. Most online programs require you to submit assignments and/or post on discussion boards weekly. You literally *CANNOT* fall behind.
You’d be surprised. I can fail anything
Some online programs are go at your own pace, so you can fall behind.
There are two different types of online classes. One where you have online lectures/meet up times and then asssignemt you submit by the next class. The other is when they post all the lectures pre-recorded, or through a third party software, and you complete the all the assignment by the end of the semester or week by week basis.
Some degrees are completed entirely online and have good curriculum it’s more along the lines of “you get what you give”.
Yeah you can't make the blanket statement that you'll barely learn anything, because you can absolutely learn a ton via online lectures. I'm guessing the difference in perception is just a difference in learning styles though.
Which online uni would you recommend???
lol I only went to the classes I needed to, my last semester. It depends on the person and subject honestly. my worst subject is math and I failed by going to every lecture in a 5-credit math course. second time around I taught myself with online videos and passed. I think the main takeaway is that you have to be serious about studying. regardless of whether you show up to lectures or not. work smarter
I excelled by not attending lectures. The two hour spent listening is better spent actively engaging the material. Originally my method required me to use office hours to understand difficult concepts and thankfully i never had to use it.
Print lecture slides, reading 20 minutes,
Actively engage concepts without taking notes 1h and more, note taking to commit to memory. No flash cards just clear notes. I found it gets easier with time to eventually finishing off 3 lecture's worth of material in one 12 hour work day (exhausting).
It's important to remember that this advice doesn't apply for everyone. For some, the online only worked better.
This is exactly why I want to go in person instead of online
Depends on the person. I get burnt out and hate the rigidity of scheduled classes. I much prefer to dedicate hours to a class and get chunks of it done once or twice a week instead of the classic rigid weekly structure. God forbid you get a prof who opens stuff up weekly on an online class.
Boring, dark, and cold lecture halls are a recipe for a nice nap 😴
Facts …. I don’t know how people don’t show up because the books and videos don’t answer all the questions to complete a program
Personally, my success has been tied to watching the recordings because I can only process technical information properly if I can be dynamic with it, which is to say, rewind and pause. It gives me a chance to pause and think (and therefore understand), and I also get the opportunity to go beyond by writing down actual, deep questions when I pause the video that I then take to in-person office hours. This has been more enriching for me than going in person to see everything the first time in the live atmosphere (rather than the recording) and do a race where you try to take notes fast to catch up with the pace of lecture, hope you magically make sense of the details as it comes and goes, and as a result, be in a position where you have to ask mundane, clarifying questions or, "Can you repeat that again?" rather than deeper questions, AND if you get lost during lecture, have to recoup all that learning loss. This is true EVEN if I read ahead. Why? Because of the extreme technical nature of computer science. And I feel this is why a LOT of learners go on TH-cam to supplement their learning: one, obviously because of the quality of resources, but two, because of the pause-and-replay feature. But I think in-person is best suited for another personality of learners who learn best that way. But I prefer recordings only in technical classes; if it's anything else, I myself prefer in-person.
In both cases, though, I agree: discipline is key. But that is true in every walk of life, as long as that walk works for you!
Remote exams factor in the possibility of people using chatgpt etc, so it ends up punishing the people that don't cheat
Depends on the person!!
Agreed
I am the opposite because I always felt like I couldn't pay attention during class due to having to take notes so fast.
Video classes were the best because I could rewatch as many times as needed, and everything made more sense.
100% am the same. There are so many like us who prefer videos and recordings but hardly those such people like us write comments stating they do so, but I think it's a lot more common preference than people think
Yep, having the mindset to not skip a single class means that you stay on top of everything, and listening at normal pace means it processes better. Also it means you are more productive. Like if you're watching lectures later on 2-3x speed, then you are already behind the person who already was at the class at 1x speed. Like while you are catching up, they are either already doing tutorial questions, revision, more work on assignments or preparing for next class. They may even be just chilling out like you were doing when you skipped class!
Bro said it word to word, PERFECT video,101℅ True.
You're not wrong, i was skipping lectures long before they were avail online, and my grades totally reflected it..
This message was very much needed! Thank you kind Sir for sharing.
God bless your sweet soul. 😊
I still feel like i learned nothing after an in person class because the sheer anxiety of needing to pass is overwhelming. Making you forget more .
Bro this is not true, I did entire f*king IT degree fully online, Only the exams were physical , yes It might be very hard but sure it's doable. Dedication is the key
Have you graduated now? And if so how are you job prospects? I’m also currently in college for IT
Where did you graduate from?
Chill broham 😂
@@miscreatedmonster2.022😐
Where you at now?
As a parent of 3, the online courses were a godsend for me. I learned a lot during that time and never fell behind my studies. Weed out the stuff that isn't important in your life.
I went to some coding lectures and didn’t learn anything did some online courses and learn a lot it’s how discipline you!
What courses and do you get like certificates
Which online learning website
Please do reply
Do you work now
Good advice. Speaking as the pot smoker engineer who'd show up to half their classes late while skipping the other half, it took me 9+ years to get an undergrad in chemical engineering after having dropped out of my first college, redo everything at community college, and finally finish university. What I learned was that I was paying for all these courses via loans, which costed literally hundreds of USD per class. College = your time + your money.
Currently wrapped in this exact predicament now. I started off freshman year as a CS major with a concentration in cybersecurity (I want to work as a sys admin, the only other concentration was game dev) and my concentration got cut (it was a liberal arts school, only cheap college in the area) anyway, I transfer to an online school under the cis major but the curriculum is dogshit and doesn't cover any relevant skills for sys admins (active directory, powershell). outside of basic networking. So for the past 2 years I've been either bullshitting or semi-bullshitting these courses.
That is your school and your❤ experience, but everyone is different.
Couldn't agree more. Im in college right now and skipping classes is an addiction. I'm glad I've learnt, but I'll never be able to fully achieve what I could have
everybody has a different strategy. But I agree with you attending those tech lectures unless prof is boring as hell and he just reads through all presentations
Tell me you didn't do much during the semester without telling me you didn't do much during the semester.
I like hearing this from a computer guy. Seems like a lot of people think online is a better option. I like teaching in-person better than online, myself.
Oh no, I can't even movie marathon for 3 hours straight. Recorded lectures will gonna be the death of me
I can’t go to in person classes because of my full time state job… and I can’t quit my full time state job because I am 30 and have to pay my bills and eat and have health insurance… sooooo online is a great option for me!
I'm so glad I'm currently taking all my classes in person when I entered college. I was getting bad grades sophomore year in high school during the pandemic. Worst year in my life!!!!
I failed in Seneca college as international student coz of online lectures, went in person again and got 3.8 gpa but in another in person program. This is real.
I went to every class I just need to work on not getting distracted and watching TH-cam the whole time.
Discouraging for individuals who rely heavily on TH-cam for learning.
For me online lectures suck because they are so boring there is no engagement and lectured are just badly delivered in a monotone voice and they just read what is already on the screen. I literally just go to TH-cam instead.
I learn pretty well with online courses that have no lectures and just a textbook. Requires discipline and ability to teach yourself. Gotta know how you learn
That's why 80% attendance is mandatory for us to appear in finals, else you repeat the course in the upcoming semester and pay again.
As someone who tried to do an online college Java class, he's spitting facts. Accredited doesn't matter either.
University is all about self discipline, I’m sure they told every student in uni or college in there first year degree on orientation day. The teachers won’t be like high school whooping ur ass, telling you off or sending emails to ur parents or give detention unable to complete to work provided and most of teachers and professors don’t care to teach you but they can specifically tell you the question and guide u like giving dot points of what to write and elaborate more on but won’t help in increasing grade for example if you don’t know how to use excel to create a table or graph with the given data the teachers mostly won’t help or teach you all they say is “watch videos on TH-cam on tutorials” . Personally, I took 2 hour lectures too lightly, I underestimated how much information they provide and how all this information is crucial to provide understanding to assignments, test and exams
How did you measure your learning? How did your professors measure your learning? Do you feel either were accurate? How can you back this up? Or is it just your feeling?
I graduated with a degree in graphic design and my last two years of school were moved to online. I had good grades but I procrastinated soooo much that I barely learned anything. A year has passed and I haven’t found work bc of poor preparation. I ended up going back to school for a higher degree and do go to in person classes again
As a CS student , I can guarantee you! ,
If you got self discipline and Passion for the computer and off course college marks don't matter you , There is nothing you can't learn by yourself
Never skip classes because u think you can self study. There are many things teachers speak in class outside of the textbook which you will be missing out.
This is your assumption and consideration based on your own situation, doesn’t necessarily applies to everyone
Months behind? I didn't know they let you get behind in the first place.
It also depends on how to college did the online courses. Some of them are good. Some of them are very terrible. I was in highschool and canvas online was terrible
Basically backlogs are harmful for people
would i look dumb if i'll say i was thinking of doing a psych major but i just changed my mind to do computer science .. i am actually scared if i can do it .. PLEASE HELP
wait till he heard about asynchronous courses… you go at your own speed 🤯😂
Why it is 100% relatable for me 🥲
I only use online videos as a mean of self learning at home if i still do not understand smth, but i think its better to ask the professor if you have difficulties.
Yh... This vid reached me in my third year... Is there still hope😢
If you're watching lectures later on 2x speed because it's "ideal", then you are already behind the person who already was at the class at 1x speed and is now revising while you are just learning😏
No bro, everything is a habit. I’m getting an online degree and first course was really difficult to be able to concentrate by myself BUT now I’m very productive and I work while I’m on the second year of my bachelors.
Which degree
And is it like distance learning
Does the certificate has same value as an in person college going student
Which website
Please do reply
...For you. Some of us learn better online
i can confirm, i failed java and my english class because of the virtual switch mixed with ego
Some lecturers just can't teach even though they are really good in that field. for instance, a Chinese person who gets graduated from a top tier university in china teaching you algorithms or database in the UK. it's very hard to understand them. There might be few people who can teach it better than the others but the majority are just not good enough.
REMINDER 🎗️
Yea, I won't.
True 👍
Just got into the hostel and my classes are going to start in a few days , getting too much tensed , but I hope I'll figure it out
My last teacher didn't even do the lecture
Me, attending a 100% online university: 😅
Which degree
Is it like distance learning
Does the certificate has same value as an in person college going students
Name of website
Please do reply 😢
Its balance. I think if you dont take anything in person then online would be it for you. My brain changed as i went into college and i need structure.
This isn't a bad take but i think the thing which is missing is this:
Why is it important to take offline classes?
At University one as a student shouldn't just be focusing to study but to understand and potentially begin their career pathways
In an offline setting not only will you be learning but there will (well should ideally be) constant rapport between students and professors about topics being taught creating a good connection between the student and the professor WHICH GOES OUT OF THE WINDOW when running cramming sessions to study, not mentioning how bad it is to cram in a understanding heavy subject like CS
But all of this is ofc with the assumption that the professor is able to setup an environment where this kind of activity can happen, if it's a professor who just reads off slides, yeah better just go online and 3x lectures or better yet learn actual content from edutainment channels
It depends on teachers' skills.
Dude never met my professors
I agree going in person is always better if that's available to you. But I think computer science requires a sort of military attitude during the semesters. You really just need to tell everyone, including yourself, this is my life until the semester is over. If you can't hack 15 hour days of study and no weekends it's just not for you.
I completely disagree, you don't have to go in person. Just make sure you keep pace with the class, which you have to do to complete your assignments on time anyways
I absolutely agree.
First of all leave Hercules out of this. 😂
That's a discipline issue. I finished 5 classes in 1 month
Yeah nah this doesn't apply to everyone, we all have different ways to effectively absorb knowledge. I have a tendency to lose focus really easily in physical lecture classes, I already knew from the first day it just wasn't going to do it for me. The following classes I had skipped, watched online recordings, practice the exercises and complete assignments given to us, and self-study with the help of online resources and TH-cam, and Istill got a HD for my classes, and this is coming from a Comp Sci major who hates Comp Sci.
A word of advice would be to not feel pressured to conform to the norms everyone tells you, find the methods that you're most comfortable with, helps you stay efficient, and produces the best results for you. The only things you need is consistency, self-discipline, and an open mind. Also be sure to take breaks away from your study space :)
its the exact opposite for me, i lose focus on my own but absorb everything when im present
Online Degree are cheap it is the future of Education. Infact degrees are obsolete nowadays. You can learning anything online. Skills are important degree is of not use.
My biggest mistake is taking computer science 💀🎈
im planning to take it, why is it a mistake?genuine question
my uni is online, I go to virtual uni in pak and the uni is online u only have to go to uni to go for exams , finals and mids, all the lectrures and quizzes are done from home on a learning system
Which college
@@nimafathima3482 virtual university of Pakistan, search it up on google
Which university??????
Need helpppp
What was your fees???
What if you are going but the lecture is not in your first language
Universities have English requirements for a reason, and is something you are already aware of. The logic of skipping classes still applies, but in your case you have to acknowledge that because of this you really need to improve your English so that you can go to classes. And I assume this is one of the few situations you are actually being immersed in English, so it will similarly improve your English, which to be fair is what will help you get a job in the country where you compete against the locals.
@@islandsociete you are right. I am actually immersed by the Russian
Can someone send me the link for the test. I'm struggling to find it
Or just watch them online at thier time
I love your english accent❤wow just perfect👏👏
can you please tell me what is actually in computer science ..? i am very scared if i'll be able to do it .. i didn't ave computers as a subject in high school and i am not THAT familiar with computers ...
I actually got into Google and I used chat GPT to get my degree
Lol. ChatGPT has only been out less than a year.
@@islandsociete I know I also did this when the API first came out. I'm an AI researcher and was into AI. Once the 3.5 API came out I immediately used it to cheat and everything
So true!
THAT VOICE OF THANOS AND FACE OF DOPPINDER
Even if remote study is an option, I would still choose to go to class. Simply because I want to utilize the school’s billions dollar infrastructure and resources that I paid thousands of dollars for.
Or just watch it on 1× speed?
My first year was learning at home and went to university only when exams appeared
or you just take full online and do everything yourself instead of doing remote. That way you do everything when and where you want and learn everything more efficiently
#relatable
Lectures are boring I don’t wanna go
Self taught youtubers left the chat
So true
True
SINCE WHEN IS A COMPSCI DEGREE NOT A STARWARS WEEKEND ?!?!?!
I don’t think that the course fault also were you doing any studying because he doesn’t seem so .
well that was YOUR work ethic being very unbalanced. me on the other hand prefer online classes, and i always stay a week ahead of assignments, so i can practice any additional coding/related concepts on my own time.
I am one of the post covid victim😢
great video