Is going to lecture a huge waste of time?

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The discussion centers on the diminishing value of traditional lectures in higher education, particularly among medical students who increasingly opt not to attend. Many students find that lecture content is often redundant with textbook material or easily accessible online, leading to sparse attendance. Some argue that lectures can be beneficial for real-time interaction and guidance from professors, while others feel that self-study and online resources are more effective. The conversation highlights the importance of personal learning styles, with some students thriving in interactive environments while others prefer independent study. There is a consensus that lectures can sometimes lack engagement and that the educational system may need to adapt to modern learning preferences, potentially shifting towards more flexible, self-directed learning models. Concerns about the high cost of education and the effectiveness of lectures in justifying that cost are also raised, suggesting a need for universities to reconsider their teaching methods.
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I notice that more and more med students in my class have figured out by now that they don't need to attend lectures anymore to get good grades. Attendance can be sparse. Every lecture is recorded and can be watched online anyway. So what's the point of lectures? Almost all material covered is in some textbook or can be found with a quick google search anyway. Are lectures an obsolete artifact within higher education? I mean I guess lectures were useful back in the day before information wasn't as easily copied and disseminated. It's 2011 though, almost every single concept taught in a university can be studied by somebody with a library card and internet access at home. What's the point of going to lecture then? I really only find lectures useful only if they go over problem sets/examples rather than going over concepts. Every concept is already discussed in a textbook.
 
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I am old school. I don't like watching lectures online or presence of any modern technology in the lectures (cell phones, power point slides etc). I prefer lectures where they go over fundamentals/concepts but don't like when it's all about going through examples.
 
I like asking questions, so even if the lecture is recorded or the professor copies examples and statements from the text verbatim, I'll still go to class.
 
They have class message boards now where you can post questions. Or just email.
 
Absolutely no substitute for a real answer from a professor.
 
Imo, the main point for a lecture is that it is rather easy to actually go to it and listen to the prof for a fixed, planned amount of time. And since there is nothing else you could sensibly do in the lecture, and the material is presented comparatively slowly, you actually can easily commit your entire concentration to the material and understand it fully.

This point would be moot if everyone had perfect self-control, and would never, say, postpone a planned session of textbook study, or go quickly over a boring bit of material in a textbook. But most people don't have that amount of self-control (I certainly didn't). I always visited all my lectures, and got away very well with it.
 
to be honest I never got very much out of lectures, I just went so that I could blindly make notes that I would hopefully make sense of later. Also my attention would easily be broken after maybe 20 minutes. I've always thought that watching videos of lectures is much more easy to focus on than when you are actually there in person, but at my uni there were no such videos.
 
The best part is that they give you an outline/notes for each lecture before hand. I have notes already, videos online, and a textbook. I don't really see the need to go to class. I think I may sleep in tomorrow. Not being tired while trying to study is more important in my opinion than waking up early and losing sleep to attend a superfluous lecture that I probably won't get much out of anyway.
 
yeah. my other motivating factor (apart from making lecture notes) was the ridiculous amount of student debt I was racking up for the privilege of attending them.
 
  • #10
I get really, really bored in lectures. I just hate to have someone talking at me about stuff, even if its something I really like, like physics. I get way more out of sitting down and really reading the book, and then talking to my peers about it if something isn't clear. I also get much more out of doing problems and struggling with it on my own. Of course, I go to professors in their office hours if I need help or I just want to talk about something I found interesting, but I hate being in lectures.

Now if it happens that there are lectures with information that can't be obtained in any book, then fine I will put in the effort to listen. I expect this to happen in my graduate studies and at conferences. I won't be happy about it though...

This may have a lot to do with how I've always done things. I didn't do well in high school because I hated to listen to the teacher and do stuff I thought was useless or that I didn't care to do. I like all subjects (or most at least), and I can usually always find something interesting in everything. I hate being forced to do it, and I also hate having some kind of negative 'incentive' hanging over my head (like tests, grades, etc.). Whenever I wanted to learn something, I just read about it, tried it, read some more about it, tried some more, and eventually I understood it and/or got really good at it. This is how I learned programming, it's how I learned mathematics, and it's how I learn physics and other maths now. I see myself as a very independent person intellectually, because the entire reason that I do all this stuff is because I like to figure things out. If someone is just telling me stuff, it doesn't interest me much.

There's another important point I'd like to make; when listening to a lecture, you can't say WAIT WAIT, could you please elaborate on what you were just referring to because I forgot, or ask them to repeat. This is highly annoying to others (I know because I get annoyed at people who are constantly asking questions in lecture), and usually not very efficient for that one person either. This is in contrast to a book, where you can flip back to where you forgot a formula, or you lacked some perception that you got later on into how this one equation might work. Just an example. With a book, it's all at your own pace. In a lecture, the professor has to try and guess what you're thinking and how/when you'll understand it, but you can't do that for all 10/40/300 people in the crowd.
 
  • #11
gravenewworld said:
I notice that more and more med students in my class have figured out by now that they don't need to attend lectures anymore to get good grades. Attendance can be sparse. Every lecture is recorded and can be watched online anyway. So what's the point of lectures? Almost all material covered is in some textbook or can be found with a quick google search anyway. Are lectures an obsolete artifact within higher education? I mean I guess lectures were useful back in the day before information wasn't as easily copied and disseminated. It's 2011 though, almost every single concept taught in a university can be studied by somebody with a library card and internet access at home. What's the point of going to lecture then? I really only find lectures useful only if they go over problem sets/examples rather than going over concepts. Every concept is already discussed in a textbook.

It is pointless to make such generalization. I've been to lectures where I was bored to death and learned nothing, and I've been to lectures where I've been inspired and excited by the subject matter from the passion and skill of the lecturer. I can say, without any doubt, that the way I deal with a physics problems and how I tackle through them have been strongly influenced by some of the best instructors that I've encountered.

Zz.
 
  • #12
I guess that nowadays there's no real need to go to lectures. Everything can be done through self-studying anyways. But I do think that lectures have some benifits, and that's why I went to almost all of them. That is

- You can ask questions during lectures. You can't do that in a video presentation. Furthermore, you can see how the lecturer deals with the question: how does he think about it and stuff? Seeing how a professor understands the material is very useful in understanding the material yourself. However, you need to read the material beforehand if you want to ask useful questions. Most people don't do this, but it really doesh help a lot.

- Lectures force you to deal with the material. If there weren't lectures and homework, then most students would procrastinate and only open their books when exams are coming. Going to lecture forces you to at least hear the material once.

- Seeing a person live in class who is enthousiastic about the material, makes you enthousiastic yourself. Seeing how a professor gets really "high" because he loves what he teaches can be a really nice experience for you. (on the other hand: professors in a bad mood might ruin the fun for you)
 
  • #13
A live, in-person lecture is capable of offering interactivity. A recorded lecture that is watched later does not give that same interactivity.

An internet forum for the class in which the students ask and answer questions with each other is not the same as including the professor. Including the professor is best managed live. Formal information and guidance is done in the lecture. Personal and professional guidance is best done in the professors office during office hours.
 
  • #14
symbolipoint said:
A live, in-person lecture is capable of offering interactivity. A recorded lecture that is watched later does not give that same interactivity.

An internet forum for the class in which the students ask and answer questions with each other is not the same as including the professor. Including the professor is best managed live. Formal information and guidance is done in the lecture. Personal and professional guidance is best done in the professors office during office hours.

Meh, personally if I were a med student I would rather not have to pay $100,000 k+ just to have a class be 'interactive' when I could learn most of the material on my own by buying a textbook, watching some free youtube vids, or by posting questions on forums with experts such as one like PF.
 
  • #15
I like lectures, because if I have a question I can get it answered RIGHT then. I also like how you meet new people within your classes.
 
  • #16
Maybe, it's time for universities to consider alternative teaching methods.

Perhaps, an undergraduate degree could become a defined 4 year reading syllabus with regular assignments and periodic examinations that prove the student is progressing through the material. Labs could be offered in a similar manner as they are now, but perhaps less cookie-cutter and with more opportunity for the students to explore their own ideas. Professors would then assume more of a mentoring roll - holding longer office hours and tutorial sessions rather than large-scale lectures.

Of course, whenever you have these kinds of ideas, it's wise to go and check if anyone has tried it before and how successful they were.
 
  • #17
The value of attending a lecture depends on the lecture. Many in this thread paint a rosy picture. Has not anyone had lectures where
-the lecturer does not show up
-the lecturer is "new"
-the lecturer does not speak the language the lecture is being given in
-the lecture refuses to acknowledge the existence of several consonants of the language
-there are 500 students in the lecture
-"No questions will be asked or answered"
-All questions are answered with non-answers
-lots of pointless questions are answered

Even where the lecture is basically good there are sometimes more pressing matters that prevent attendance. There is also the question of if lecture is the best use on a so called contact hour, but often the lecturer is or administrator is the one making that choice.
 
  • #18
I think there are a ton of hidden costs when it comes to never actually meeting with people on a regular basis (so, extending beyond just not going to physical lectures). In the scientific fields, how much can one really call his or herself a scientist if they never interact with professors, attend office hours, chat with other students, etc etc. I think MOST of what I learned came from getting help from others and talking to professors. Of course, 100% of the extracurricular activities and opportunities took their roots in talking to professors during lecture and after. I mean, professors are human; how much interest are they going to show when it comes to helping someone really make it as a scientist if they see the person 3 times a semester. Textbooks and internet forums can't really sit down and talk to you about what the peer-review process is like or how graduate school works and what have you.

I wonder how this translates to non-scientific fields.
 
  • #19
gravenewworld said:
The best part is that they give you an outline/notes for each lecture before hand. I have notes already, ...

The act of rewriting notes from a lecture (in my own words) is a huge part of my learning strategy. If forces a more conceptual understanding of the material and illuminates my weak areas. In mathematics (as well as physics, I'm sure), it is very important for one to understand how things are related and why you're doing what you're doing.
 
  • #20
I think a lot of it depends on the lecturers. Even though I go to all my lectures there are some I think I could do just as well in by staying home and self studying. Often times at lecture I find myself blindly copying down notes and not comprehending what's happening anyway. The only lecture I don't go to is a statistics course where I can't quite make out what my lecturer is saying to begin with and everything including lecture notes and worked example problems are posted online.

On a somewhat related note, I have a lecturer this semester who took down a seating arrangement so he could take attendance every day. I think a small portion of our grade is attendance so its easy points, but it kinda pissed me off. Makes me feel like I'm in middle school again.
 
  • #21
I completely agree that most lectures are almost a complete waste of time. In my mind, as others have said, they only work to keep me on schedule and to prevent procrastination.

On the other hand, OFFICE HOURS are definitely NOT a waste of time. I would even argue to all the people in this thread who claim lectures are good because they are interactive or because you can make connections and find opportunities, that these things can be obtained even better during office hours.
 
  • #22
90% of the time you can learn more by staying home and reading the textbook(as long as it has a solution manual to accompany it, books without solutions are useless), you just need to talk to people that went to the lecture to ask them what he will ask in the exams.

Yes, there are some good lecturers, but I think they should just record their lectures on cam and put it on a site, like MIT does with some classes.
As I didn't live in the campus(not usual around here) and I need to travel like 50 minutes to 1 hour to college, plus 1 hour back, not going to college saved me 2 hours a day, not counting expenses with gasoline, food and other stuff.
Some professors made lecture presence mandatory, so these were the only times I went regularly.

I think in the future this will end, colleges will put their courses online and you could go there in person to talk with professors and TA's to help you with any problems and to do the exams.
The math department on my university already did that with some courses, you can watch the linear algebra and calculus courses online, study at your own pace and just show up to do the tests.
And it works great.
It's also a lot cheaper, since you don't need to divert professors from their research, to maintain huge classrooms and all that.
 
  • #23
If everyone is so dissatisfied with the quality of instruction at their colleges and universities, why don't you leave and go somewhere else?
 
  • #24
just let us know where you open your practice so we do not wind up as your patients, mr self educated med student guy.
 
  • #25
Vanadium 50 said:
If everyone is so dissatisfied with the quality of instruction at their colleges and universities, why don't you leave and go somewhere else?

For many of the same reasons people don't just up and leave their jobs. Not that that's an excuse, but I think that's how people justify it.

Of course, where is "somewhere else"? This is far from a problem with any single institution.
 
  • #26
diligence said:
...

On the other hand, OFFICE HOURS are definitely NOT a waste of time. I would even argue to all the people in this thread who claim lectures are good because they are interactive or because you can make connections and find opportunities, that these things can be obtained even better during office hours.

I don't think this is true for everyone. As I mentioned in my other post, going through it (rewriting lecture notes from class) myself really helps me understand on a greater level. That's not to say I don't use office hours, but most of the time there simply isn't enough time during an office hour session to accomplish what I can accomplish in the library with a few cups of coffee. :biggrin:

Hurkyl has mentioned, many times, the importance of learning how to learn. This varies from person to person and can't be generalized.
 
  • #27
mathwonk said:
just let us know where you open your practice so we do not wind up as your patients, mr self educated med student guy.

You're crazy if you think I'm the only one...there are TONS of kids in med school that don't go to class that do very still do very well on the Step 1 exam. I'm not training to be a physician anyway :smile:. Hell one of my buddies is in residency right now training to be a surgeon at the University of Illinois and he almost never went to class because everything was online. Being in the clinic is far more important anyway.I guess it's only natural for the academics on here to have to defend their profession.
 
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  • #28
Pengwuino said:
I think there are a ton of hidden costs when it comes to never actually meeting with people on a regular basis (so, extending beyond just not going to physical lectures). In the scientific fields, how much can one really call his or herself a scientist if they never interact with professors, attend office hours, chat with other students, etc etc. I think MOST of what I learned came from getting help from others and talking to professors. Of course, 100% of the extracurricular activities and opportunities took their roots in talking to professors during lecture and after. I mean, professors are human; how much interest are they going to show when it comes to helping someone really make it as a scientist if they see the person 3 times a semester. Textbooks and internet forums can't really sit down and talk to you about what the peer-review process is like or how graduate school works and what have you.

I wonder how this translates to non-scientific fields.
You can do all interacting actually working and doing research in a lab. Maybe universities should start transitioning their curriculum from an old an outdated model of education to a new form of training students in labs more so than the class room. Periodically give them exams to make sure they are indeed learning concepts on their own. Let's face it, you could learn almost all the material in an undergrad mathematics curriculum just by reading through Mathworld.com and buying a $100 used textbook and working problems rather than having to spend $40k per year doing it. If you are paying that much for a degree, maybe universities really should be training their students to be more employable in the real world by training them more with lab work and other applicable skills. Almost all the information one would have to learn these days in an undergrad curriculum is completely free online. I learned how the gut tube develops and rotates in the embryo much more effectively by watching free youtube vids than from the lecture the professor gave.

I totally agree with choppy.
 
  • #29
Pengwuino said:
For many of the same reasons people don't just up and leave their jobs.

Yes, but you're getting paid at work. In college, it's the other way. If someone thinks sitting in lecture is a waste of time, why in heaven are they paying for it?
 
  • #30
romsofia said:
I like lectures, because if I have a question I can get it answered RIGHT then. I also like how you meet new people within your classes.

I can meet new people at the bar. Is it really worth it to pay $40k per year for an undergrad degree so you can have your questions answered right away?

Here you go, you can learn Thermodynamics from MIT completely free:

http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/chemistry/5-60-thermodynamics-kinetics-spring-2008/video-lectures/


Just buy the text for $100 and you can do practice problems. No need for a $40k/yr tuition.


Seriously, maybe universities should start thinking about restructuring education and the way they train students since information is now completely free and easily accessible.
 
  • #31
Vanadium 50 said:
Yes, but you're getting paid at work. In college, it's the other way. If someone thinks sitting in lecture is a waste of time, why in heaven are they paying for it?

You're receiving an education though. Supposedly.

I'm trying to figure out which is the main issue being made. Is the OP angry that people have to pay so much for their education? Or that the education isn't being delivered in a useful fashion?

Would lectures be okay if you were only paying $400/semester? Also, I think MOST people here would tell you that $40k/year tuition is absurd and very hard to justify, despite the fact that countless schools do cost that much. However, being more realistic, what about the $10k/year guys?
 
  • #32
Vanadium 50 said:
Yes, but you're getting paid at work. In college, it's the other way. If someone thinks sitting in lecture is a waste of time, why in heaven are they paying for it?

For a lot of people it is a means to an end. You would not expect a non-maths major to have the same attitude and appreciation for mathematics as a math major. There are many courses that people have to take in university that people just are not interested in.
 
  • #33
Pengwuino said:
You're receiving an education though. Supposedly.

I'm trying to figure out which is the main issue being made. Is the OP angry that people have to pay so much for their education? Or that the education isn't being delivered in a useful fashion?

Would lectures be okay if you were only paying $400/semester? Also, I think MOST people here would tell you that $40k/year tuition is absurd and very hard to justify, despite the fact that countless schools do cost that much. However, being more realistic, what about the $10k/year guys?

I'm mad?
 
  • #34
Pengwuino said:
You're receiving an education though. Supposedly.

I'm trying to figure out which is the main issue being made. Is the OP angry that people have to pay so much for their education? Or that the education isn't being delivered in a useful fashion?

Would lectures be okay if you were only paying $400/semester? Also, I think MOST people here would tell you that $40k/year tuition is absurd and very hard to justify, despite the fact that countless schools do cost that much. However, being more realistic, what about the $10k/year guys?

You'd probably be better if you just asked them. Some people might tell you that they really have learned something, other people might say it delayed them a few years from doing any actual work, others might be doing it just so that they can have an above average job, or even a job that is not "beneath" them.

For me personally I don't have to pay that much for college, but one of the reasons is that I am doing subjects where there are shortage of professionals in our country (mathematics). I actually like mathematics (for the most part anyway), and I am doing it for that reason.

But you might get other people who are doing mathematics or degrees with a significant mathematics component in them for other reasons which may include certain job opportunities with income opportunities.

For me personally I've found lower level course lectures quite boring and sometimes completely unnecessary, but having said that I later realized that the course was not just catering for "me", but for quite a number of students with diverse backgrounds both academically and course-wise, and it is important that people keep this in mind, in my opinion.
 
  • #35
Not attending lectures is just begging to fail. Even if you are bored to tears, writing down lecture points will strengthen your comprehension of the material. You miss the emotional content of the lecture without face time.
 
  • #36
I did teach to earn a living and share knowledge, but my profession was also research mathematician. To do that I needed to know a lot and constantly learn more. As such I took a lot of classes and still attend some. Of course there are many slackers in every class and every profession, but the best students always go to every class and read every assignment do every homework and add to that by doing outside work as well. They also go to office hours if they are wise. Many students made the same excuses to me about coming to office hours, ignoring the fact that I was available at all hours by appointment, and would stay as long as they needed, and sometimes stayed up to 3 hours. It was the students who would not make time, not the professors. Of course there are exceptions, and some professors are stingy with their time, but not at my university.

As others have observed, just as it is a skill to impart knowledge it is also a skill to derive knowledge from others. And you may need practice in that skill. Give it a try. Learn to listen, learn to question intelligently. I also had a hard time learning this. Once I realized that while I was fuming at the poor job my professor was doing, my buddy who was a lot smarter than I am, drew him out very skillfully with a great question.

Maybe your prof thinks the students are lazy and has a hard time getting himself psyched up for the lecture. Try asking an intelligent question to light him up. I used to skip class too, back when I was an unsuccessful student blaming my problems on my professors. I'm saying this now late in life as a successful scientist and academic (although it took me a long time to learn to become one). And my wife is a successful physician. She didn't skip class either. Good luck to you.
 
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  • #37
Vanadium 50 said:
Yes, but you're getting paid at work. In college, it's the other way. If someone thinks sitting in lecture is a waste of time, why in heaven are they paying for it?

I'm a little confused at your first comment about why people won't just leave. I see a degree as proof that I can do stuff. I pay for it because I need that proof so that people will let me do real stuff and earn much, much more money than I've put into that piece of paper. Part of it is also so that I can spend some time learning and practicing stuff, but I could've done that without paying tuition.

I find that my best skill isn't really anything more than figuring out stuff that kicks my butt. How do I show others that I can really do this? I don't see classes as one of the more important resources at my school (I know this sounds really weird). If I could just take a book to a professor and say hey, can you answer me some questions if I have any on this? Then spend the semester doing it, and at the end show him what I've learned. Obviously this could never work if everyone tried to do it, but I don't see how it's a negative thing to complain about an inadequate system.

I'm not saying I have any ideas, but I can still say that it sucks.
 
  • #38
Engineering school had huge lecture halls. It would have been easy to skip lectures, unnoticed. I never skipped lectures. I took my lecture notes in cryptic little remarks in the margins of the texts and underlined relevant portions of the text. That way, all my notes were in the context of the way that the lecturers presented the materials in the text. It is naive to think that when a prof draws up his/her exams, (s)he is going to adhere strictly to the text and not favor their own interpretation of the materials. If you are studying in a demanding field, with fast-moving research and new papers coming out regularly, you might have a hard time keeping up with just a textbook, unless you are studying really basic stuff.
 
  • #39
I was wondering the same thing because lately I feel like I haven't been getting a lot out of my lectures. I think the main reason for that is that I haven't been reading ahead. The few times I did, class was a much better experience.

In general I think the value of going to lecture depends on how closely/loosely your instructor follows the textbook. If the class is pretty much a repeat of what is said in the textbook, and the problems are assigned from there as well, then there wouldn't really be a lot of value in going to class, other than of course, if you read the book beforehand. Then it would serve as good reinforcement and it might clarify other things you were wondering about when reading it the first time around.

Secondly, I also don't think that it's possible to walk into class, write some stuff on your notebook for 40-50 minutes and then walk out having mastered the concepts. If you really want to understand the material you're going to have to read the textbook, conceptualize the ideas and build an intuition, ask yourself questions, ponder over them and do lots of problems. Going to lecture probably contributes to that process but not by much.
 
  • #40
hadsed said:
I'm a little confused at your first comment about why people won't just leave.

There are a couple thousand colleges in the US. If U of X isn't providing what you want, why not go to U of Y?
 
  • #41
gravenewworld said:
I notice that more and more med students in my class have figured out by now that they don't need to attend lectures anymore to get good grades. Attendance can be sparse. Every lecture is recorded and can be watched online anyway. So what's the point of lectures? Almost all material covered is in some textbook or can be found with a quick google search anyway. Are lectures an obsolete artifact within higher education? I mean I guess lectures were useful back in the day before information wasn't as easily copied and disseminated. It's 2011 though, almost every single concept taught in a university can be studied by somebody with a library card and internet access at home. What's the point of going to lecture then? I really only find lectures useful only if they go over problem sets/examples rather than going over concepts. Every concept is already discussed in a textbook.

I actually had a physics professor who enunciated that lectures were an efficient method of transferring the contents of the professor's notebook to the students notebook while completely bypassing the student's mind.
 
  • #42
turbo said:
Engineering school had huge lecture halls. It would have been easy to skip lectures, unnoticed. I never skipped lectures. I took my lecture notes in cryptic little remarks in the margins of the texts and underlined relevant portions of the text. That way, all my notes were in the context of the way that the lecturers presented the materials in the text. It is naive to think that when a prof draws up his/her exams, (s)he is going to adhere strictly to the text and not favor their own interpretation of the materials. If you are studying in a demanding field, with fast-moving research and new papers coming out regularly, you might have a hard time keeping up with just a textbook, unless you are studying really basic stuff.

Again, you are thinking about a day in age when recorded lectures online were not available. The lectures for the day are posted online, full length, and can be downloaded within 20 or 30 minutes right after the lecture is given. Personally, I think the 'emotional' factor that is involved when a lecture is being delivered is being overrated.

I save vast amounts of time by not going to lecture, watching the lectures in faster speeds/pausing when I need to and by fast forwarding through questions I don't need to listen to or be answered. Also let's not forget, when you are writing down notes while sitting through lecture you are missing things the prof says. Being able to watch the video means you can pause whenever you want to take notes. That way you don't miss anything said. I can get potential test questions that come from a professor's lecture by watching the video.
 
  • #43
it seems at least for the moment, that you are hopelessly lost to good advice. why do you post here if you know better?

mind, i do not give up on you permanently. how old are you? i was about 28 when i learned to attend class.
 
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  • #44
mathwonk said:
it seems at least for the moment, that you are hopelessly lost to good advice. why do you post here if you know better?

mind, i do not give up on you permanently. how old are you? i was about 28 when i learned to attend class.

28, and how old are you? Were you even around learning in universities with the type of technology that we have available today in the classroom? Probably not.

Information is everywhere, and it is free or easily accessible these days. I'm just wondering how long it is before the internet really revolutionizes higher education.

Digital media transformed the music industry within the span of about 10 years, why can't education be the same? Whether you like it or not, it's starting to happen, and kids these days are learning radically different than you guys who went to school 20 or 30 years ago.
It's only a matter of time before there are lectures posted for every single subject that could be watched by anyone for free. Universities will eventually have to transition to being less involved in education and more research focused.

They should let students learn the material on their own, offer a few problem sessions/Q and A per week (which is much more helpful than a lecture), and supplement with office hours. Professors get to spend more time doing research and kids can save time and money.

Rather than making coursework the cornerstone of a degree, maybe it is time universities should start making research a milestone for graduation. After all, you can't watch a video on work that hasn't been completed yet.
 
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  • #45
gravenewworld said:
It's only a matter of time before there are lectures posted for every single subject that could be watched by anyone for free.

Already happened.I think this whole thread is almost pointless. Nobody here has been to his lectures, and likewise, he has not been to any of ours. Each persons experience will differ. Personally, I have had fantastic courses that made the lectures entertaining. I have also had dry courses where attending the lecture no doubt helped in the understanding of the material. I have even had a course where the "lecture" did more harm than good. In the latter course, it not only served me better to, but I had to, out of necessity, learn the material on my own. I still attended every lecture, because you simply don't know when important information will be made available. Perhaps Professor Whatshisname has a specific style of problem that is unique to the course, cannot be found online, is completely non-intuitive, and will be on a test. You can't possibly know.

What else do you have you do? You already scheduled your life around that time right? Why not show up, and if it's a waste, study your notes during the lecture.
 
  • #46
Vanadium 50 said:
There are a couple thousand colleges in the US. If U of X isn't providing what you want, why not go to U of Y?

The problem isn't restricted to U of X, it's the entire higher-level education system.
 
  • #47
QuarkCharmer said:
Already happened.


I think this whole thread is almost pointless. Nobody here has been to his lectures, and likewise, he has not been to any of ours. Each persons experience will differ. Personally, I have had fantastic courses that made the lectures entertaining. I have also had dry courses where attending the lecture no doubt helped in the understanding of the material. I have even had a course where the "lecture" did more harm than good. In the latter course, it not only served me better to, but I had to, out of necessity, learn the material on my own. I still attended every lecture, because you simply don't know when important information will be made available. Perhaps Professor Whatshisname has a specific style of problem that is unique to the course, cannot be found online, is completely non-intuitive, and will be on a test. You can't possibly know.

What else do you have you do? You already scheduled your life around that time right? Why not show up, and if it's a waste, study your notes during the lecture.


How about useful things like studying for the quiz in the class right after, getting ahead in the reading for the next day, or, if you are not a morning person, sleeping in so you are not tired later on in the day in order to make it better for you to absorb the material later in the day while studying.


And I do know when the important info will be available---20 minutes after the lecture. I already have the outline of the class notes too. You'd be surprised just how many med students skip class completely almost every single day. And there's no way they're failing, because if that many were, there would be no way the class average on the exams would be as high as they are (88 and 89 for the first two).
 
  • #48
I feel it is a waste of time unless the instructor gives specific information in regards to a test/assignment or you have a specific question which the instructor will take time to answer.

I hate the arrogance of some professors who feel compelled to force students to listen to their rambling.
 
  • #49
you are a perfect example of why teachers should not be blamed for the failure of their students. some people just cannot be helped.
 
  • #50
mathwonk said:
you are a perfect example of why teachers should not be blamed for the failure of their students. some people just cannot be helped.

Maybe this would be applicable...only if I were failing (which I'm not).
 
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