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Re: Open University ..thoughts?
[Re: H_R]
#1581210
29/07/2016 11:55
29/07/2016 11:55
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Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 5,988 Sunny Darlo
Wishy
Forum is my life
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Forum is my life
Joined: Jan 2006
Posts: 5,988
Sunny Darlo
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I believe it is harder than going to university..... Certainly this, I teach distance learning Engineering HNC/D at a local University so a similar sort of delivery to the OU. The dedication and self-motivation that you'll need is very different to a course with regular face to face contact. I'm not trying to put you off but to help prepare you for that aspect.
Up yours Photobucket.
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Re: Open University ..thoughts?
[Re: coupedummy]
#1581273
30/07/2016 00:50
30/07/2016 00:50
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Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 6,144 Southampton, Hants
Roadking
Club member 1809
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Club member 1809
Forum is my life
Joined: Jun 2006
Posts: 6,144
Southampton, Hants
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On the negative side you have to be dedicated. I managed 3 units of a Science based degree in the 90s (which at the time would have been a BA) before I lost interest. Not helped by running out of units which interested me.
I wanted to do a history degree, but their idea of history and mine were not the same. Basically it was art or religion based, I wanted to do political history.
"RK's way seems the most sensible to me". ali_hire 16 Dec 2010
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Re: Open University ..thoughts?
[Re: coupedummy]
#1581285
30/07/2016 09:14
30/07/2016 09:14
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Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 33,771 Berlin
barnacle
Club Member 18 - ex-Minister without Portfolio
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Club Member 18 - ex-Minister without Portfolio
Forum Demigod
Joined: Dec 2005
Posts: 33,771
Berlin
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Rueben, not sure my experiences are still relevant - they were some time ago.
However, when I did it the usual structure for a course was the delivery of a huge pile of reference books - six or eight inches high - plus a number of forms which had to be filled in and attached to tutor-marked-assessments - TMAs. Those at grad level were generally quite short but happened quite often, every two or three weeks on some courses - the higher level courses had assessments which were not so frequent but a lot harder work; the ones on my dissertation year were all over ten thousand words...
There used to be videos over the TV at odd hours of the night, then that changed to delivery by video tape and then DVD; I suspect now that most lectures will be available over the web (hint, if they are, save as to keep them locally so you don't need to be online!). I also suspect that the TMAs will be submitted over the web too.
I had many arguments/discussions with the OU over their insistence that Windows was required as an OS - there are many courses that have specific applications you have to run locally, which may or may not affect you, and you have to deliver in Word format - I found that LibreOffice was fine. I managed, after much discussion, to deliver my dissertation in pdf form; I wrote it using LyX and LaTeX.
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Re: Open University ..thoughts?
[Re: coupedummy]
#1581819
06/08/2016 13:22
06/08/2016 13:22
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Enforcer
Unregistered
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Enforcer
Unregistered
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I have been a tutor for the OU for the past six years, and have enjoyed every minute of it. The students are keen, and the material is well-thought-out (usually) and interesting. Assessment takes the form of (about) six writing assignments spaced out over the course, and an exam at the end.
Guidance is provided through several media; face-to-face tutorials, of which there are too few, discussion forums on the internet, where an unlimited amount of contact with your tutor is available (depending on the tutor), and the course books, which are reproduced online. Relevant videos and recordings are all on the course website. Finally, if you have a good tutor, you will have ongoing email access to him/her.
Yes, you do need quite a lot of study time, but there is a fair amount of flexibility with submission dates for the required written work.
Let me know if you need any further information.
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Re: Open University ..thoughts?
[Re: coupedummy]
#1584792
17/09/2016 18:43
17/09/2016 18:43
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NuIotaChi
Unregistered
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NuIotaChi
Unregistered
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Having just completed a BSc (hons) a the OU, I would like to point out a couple of things.
1. Their bureaucracy is appalling. Typically, they use their own terminilogy and if you have no idea about the language of academia, tough. It's hard to get any sense out of their office staff.
2. The Student pages are poorly organised. Trying to find the relevant bits of information can be a real challenge. For my final, I could not find out the desired report structure anywhere. I finally found it a link embedded in page two of another link embedded in page 4 of the calendar schedule for the report. They just seem to love hiding things.
3. Unless you are doing something very standard (ie. history, English, Mathematics), you will not leave with the same degree you signed up for unless you can finish it in four-five years. They create and drop the more modern degrees faster than most people can complete them. They will allow you to transfer your points... mostly, but you may have to fight for the rest.
Having said all this, I have no experience of other universities, so I cannot make a comparison.
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