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I realize, "Full", audio lectures have become an important part of my learning process. I take it in at my convenience (such as breaks at work or while doing menial tasks). Plus, after a full day in front of a computer, my eyes are rather fatigued. Options like Study.com have worked really well for me. Best of all is on a mobile device.
NationsU and Liberty are my current top choices for a masters (leaning towards psychology and/or theological). I'm not seeing lots of evidence that this form of learning is available - or at best, it's very limited. Have you heard of/seen any institutions that have a mobile audio component? Or is Masters-level work simply not there and requires butts in seats? Makes me wonder how the blind deal with this. Thx
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There are thousands of online master's programs. Online master's degree programs require you to read a lot. Rarely will they have recorded or live lectures.
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08-20-2017, 08:39 PM
(This post was last modified: 08-20-2017, 08:39 PM by graduatesoon.)
I had the textbooks from Saylor read aloud. I used Aldiko e reader or grabmybooks with other readers. Aldiko premium worked best for me.
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08-20-2017, 08:56 PM
(This post was last modified: 08-20-2017, 08:58 PM by cookderosa.)
(08-20-2017, 11:47 AM)jb111 Wrote: I realize, "Full", audio lectures have become an important part of my learning process. I take it in at my convenience (such as breaks at work or while doing menial tasks). Plus, after a full day in front of a computer, my eyes are rather fatigued. Options like Study.com have worked really well for me. Best of all is on a mobile device.
NationsU and Liberty are my current top choices for a masters (leaning towards psychology and/or theological). I'm not seeing lots of evidence that this form of learning is available - or at best, it's very limited. Have you heard of/seen any institutions that have a mobile audio component? Or is Masters-level work simply not there and requires butts in seats? Makes me wonder how the blind deal with this. Thx
All the courses I took through Harvard Extension's graduate program were live lectures that were streamed but then also recorded to watch at your convenience. I would expect that even their archived courses are lecture / video based. BTW, they were awesome. No reason you couldn't listen without watching.
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(08-20-2017, 08:39 PM)graduatesoon Wrote: I had the textbooks from Saylor read aloud. I used Aldiko e reader or grabmybooks with other readers. Aldiko premium worked best for me.
I did some testing. These programs work pretty well! 2X speed is perfect. Thx