Tag Archives: online

What’s it really like to study online?

We run an entirely online MSc for healthcare professionals in Oncology and Palliative Care, but I have never actually studied via e-learning…until now! I have just started studying an MSc course which is delivered entirely online and I just wanted to share my experience of e-learning from a student perspective.

At first I was apprehensive, after spending so long supporting my own students and saying things like “online learning is the future”…what if I couldn’t hack studying online? What if I wasn’t motivated enough?

So how is it going you ask?  Well I am thoroughly enjoying it, I can’t deny that it is a completely different experience to any previous learning but I have found that there is far more support than on my face-to-face undergraduate degree.   The best element, I find, is the online discussion boards and online tutorials, these let you know that you are on the right track, that the other people are “real” and they are facing with the same issues as you. Grappling with technology when you are on your own can be daunting but there is always someone to help you, via email, phone or discussion board and if you ask the group via discussion, someone has probably already had that issue and worked it out, all you need to do is ask!

I have found the key to a successful week is getting a really good routine, at the start of the week making a list of everything that needs to be done for that topic and then making a plan for the week. My approach has been to do a bit of work every evening, and then it doesn’t feel like it is taking up ALL of your time.

So what are the negative aspects…Of course it does take up quite a bit of time and the housework is certainly falling by the wayside and I am also boring people to tears by telling them ALL about the things I have learnt that week, but they are yet to tell me to shut up (there is still time!)

Cake and Tea
Studying Essentials

It is so convenient to be able to study from anywhere with an internet connection, no need to leave the house when it’s raining and blowing a gale. Just open your laptop, get a comfy chair and a cup of tea (and may be some cake) and you are good to go! The take home message…. I still think e-learning is great and now I have first-hand experience! Give it a go!

Ellie

 

In Praise of Postgraduate Study Supporters

 

Chatting to the VC at a Newcastle Graduation
Chatting to the VC at a Newcastle Graduation

Although I am a tutor on this course, I also know what it is like being on the other side of the text books or laptop screen.  Not just with my own studies, but also as a family supporter of a postgraduate student – in my case my husband.  In fact, I’m writing this the day after his graduation ceremony, so forgive me if I become sentimental and reach for the tissues.  You have been warned!

As an undergraduate you take for granted that the people who love you – mainly your parents – will make sure you’re fed, watered, clothed and generally cared for.  But as a postgrad you quickly realise how much those who share their lives with you have to sacrifice to help you on your journey.  Sunday afternoons out, school plays, trips to the cinema, weekends away… they seem like a distant memory, suspended on a promise of better things to come.  The loss of a housework-friendly spouse to the inner sanctum of the study was a one  I particularly grieved over.

But it’s not just the physical, hands-on help your non-studying supporter will have taken on for you.  It’s the emotional protection they give you that is so often overlooked yet demands the most.  Even just listening to your loved one ventilating about unrealistic assignment deadlines, tight timetables and unintelligible coursework takes its toll – especially when you’re facing a full laundry basket, a heart-broken teenager and an eleventh-hour school project.  Alone.

Or so it seems.  But when you see your spouse or parent, partner, child, sibling or friend in cap and gown, walking up to receive their handshake and certificate… when you listen to the rousing valedictorian speech… even when you’re sipping champagne at your celebratory cocktail party (if you’re lucky)… then you know it’s all been worth it.

At my postgraduate congregation all the graduates turned to face the audience and applauded their friends and family supporters, in a gesture of gratitude that seemed too

Family and friends there to celebrate
Family and friends there to celebrate

small.  I’m welling up with tears just remembering that moment, and it was 6 years ago, such is the power of that simple, heart-felt act (well, I did warn you).  I saw a sea of proud faces – smiling, waving, cheering, clapping – each one had travelled every step of the journey with us.  We just hadn’t really noticed that they were there until that moment.

So when you finally finish your studies and are realising the fruits of your labours, turn to the ones that were with you and say thanks.  One day, if you’re lucky, you may have the opportunity to return the favour.

Dr Vicky Hewitt- Module Leader and Personal Tutor

The origin of species – or at least of this course!

Dr Charles Kelly- Deputy Degree Programme Director
Dr Charles Kelly- Deputy Degree Programme Director

 This group of MSc s is still the only one available anywhere in the world completely online.
Its origins go back into the mists of time or at least to the mid to late 1990s. The educational environment was very different then. Most distance learning was still carried out using a text based correspondence course model, and even the Open University, Britain’s leading pioneer in distance learning had most of its courses using this model with students being sent a box full of textbooks and notes when they initially signed up to a course.
MOOCs, of course had not even been thought of, and to be honest most computers were used as glorified typewriters or for playing games by adolescent youths.
Oncology did have formal postgraduate courses and there were several MScs in oncology across the country, based at some of the larger oncology centres but they tended to have small numbers of students, were primarily aimed at medical graduates, and did not fit in awfully well with the model of medical postgraduate education, which at that time and still is through vocationally based Royal College diploma courses ending up with a completed certificate of training.
These regional MScs associated with universities also suffer from problems with capacity and demand with some years there being very few students wishing to do the course and other years a lot more, making future planning difficult.

A few years after taking up appointment in Newcastle, I was asked to look at the possibility of setting up a Newcastle MSc, but rather than using the model in place at the time, I and some colleagues explored the possibility of an online course which should to some extent reduce the capacity and demand problem, be scalable and accessible to a greater number of students throughout the UK and indeed the world.
Another consideration which we took very seriously, was the realisation that the great majority of students taking these courses would be in either part-time or full-time employment, and they would appreciate the benefits of online learning which they could do, fitting in with their employment and family life and not taking them away from their place of work. We were also very keen to have multi-professional access to the course, to a much greater extent than other oncology MScs
So as a small group we moved on to developing the MScs as a solo project and, by this time, Dr Graham Dark, , had joined the consultant body at, as was then Northern Centre for Cancer Treatment, Newcastle General Hospital.
Looking back, I think, in the beginning, we were incredibly naive (and to be truthful, naïvely stupid, in a good way) and this actually helped us. I think if we’d sat down and thought about all the potential obstructions and challenges, the courses would never have got off the ground. We did have a certain “Bob the builder” attitude – can we do it, yes we can!

The courses are now flourishing and developing further streams, and we have a great team, and I think it would be fair to say happy team, which is important to us
Maybe in years to come, a University archaeologist will dig deep into the paperwork in my office (notoriously overstuffed and disorganised) and find the documentation from the very start of the course, the “big bang” moment.

My experience of the course, has been both enjoyable and very fulfilling. I particularly enjoy when our students come in person for graduation in Newcastle, knowing this is the only time they have actually been in Newcastle, and that they are here voluntarily, because the course has given them the flexibility of completing it from wherever they live and work, and they’re coming to Newcastle to mark, I hope, one of the red letter days in their lives.
I suppose the only advice I can give from the course is that if you think you have a good idea, hold onto the naive stupidity and go for it, thinking why not do this rather than listening to all the naysayers telling you the 17 reasons why it won’t work.

Continue to enjoy the courses!
Dr Charles Kelly