Hey, I recently finished one of your Udemy courses and found it convenient and informative. I was wondering if there are any significant differences between your courses on Udemy and Skillshare.
Hi there! The main difference is that Skillshare encourages teachers to include a project for students to upload, promoting more interaction within the community. For Udemy, I've-mostly-adapted this by suggesting students create projects to track their own progress, as the platform lacks a built-in system for this. Skillshare also allows me to reference external content a bit more, especially in intro videos. I prefer Skillshare as a platform overall, but content-wise the classes are pretty much the same :)
I just see it more like a separate skillset. It won't stop you from being able to write with finger movement (which is what we are mostly using when writing print), but it can rather teach you how to use other muscles-muscles that make it much more comfortable to write. I very rarely write in print these days, but when I do I notice that it's still the same bad as it was before haha... it also makes me realize how much more comfortable writing with muscular movement is.
I want to try to write cursive but i when i wabt to write something i want to be fast i dont have patience LOL thats why everytime my cursuve is always bad
You need to know that handwriting is direct exercise for brain, not many knows it
Great commentary! Your presentation is also great!
Thank you!🙏
Thanks
❤❤❤good to know!
Hey, I recently finished one of your Udemy courses and found it convenient and informative. I was wondering if there are any significant differences between your courses on Udemy and Skillshare.
Hi there! The main difference is that Skillshare encourages teachers to include a project for students to upload, promoting more interaction within the community. For Udemy, I've-mostly-adapted this by suggesting students create projects to track their own progress, as the platform lacks a built-in system for this. Skillshare also allows me to reference external content a bit more, especially in intro videos.
I prefer Skillshare as a platform overall, but content-wise the classes are pretty much the same :)
@@afadingthought Thanks a lot for the reply.
Will muscular writing make it hard to write in print?
I just see it more like a separate skillset. It won't stop you from being able to write with finger movement (which is what we are mostly using when writing print), but it can rather teach you how to use other muscles-muscles that make it much more comfortable to write. I very rarely write in print these days, but when I do I notice that it's still the same bad as it was before haha... it also makes me realize how much more comfortable writing with muscular movement is.
I want to try to write cursive but i when i wabt to write something i want to be fast i dont have patience LOL thats why everytime my cursuve is always bad