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Message Boards

7/31/2010 11:41:37 PM ET
 
CONTENTS
 
What is a message board?

General tips for reading messages

General tips for posting messages

General tips for posting homework

Why you can't use an offline reader at CompuMaster Online Training

   
 
RELATED LINKS
 

Using the Community Forums

CompuMaster Online Training Membership Agreement


Additional Reference Page

   

This section outlines the main method by which our students interact: the message boards.

Access to this feature may not be part of your subscription. If you cannot see this feature on the site, ask your administrator about feature availability.

What is a message board?

Most of the interaction at CompuMaster Online Training is conducted on Web-based message boards. A message board allows you to post messages for others to read and to organize those messages into topics.

Message boards work similarly to newsgroups. Each week, the instructor posts lessons and assignments, and you can connect to CompuMaster Online Training and read them anytime you wish.

Members can also ask questions, make comments, or help others in the class by posting their own messages. Teaching assistants and other staff moderate the classroom so that you see only messages that are relevant to the topic. No flames, no spam. Just focused learning.


General tips for reading messages

Once you get to the classroom, what do you do?

Read the messages posted there. In CompuMaster Online Training courses, almost all interaction between the instructor and the students takes place through messages posted in the classroom--lectures, assignments, question and answer sessions, homework, group discussions, and so on.

Below are some good, general tips for reading the boards.

Read all the messages. When you're busy, it's tempting to shorten your sessions by reading only the lectures and assignments from the instructor, but you'll miss a lot if you do. Many of the best ideas, the best answers, and the best pointers to new resources come up in exchanges between students, or between students and the instructor or training assistant. If you're stuck on part of the course work, there's a good chance that others are, too, and that they're already working out the solution in classroom discussions.

You do, though, need to keep track of messages containing lectures and assignments from your instructor. Beside every message that your instructor posts is a special instructor icon. Look for it. There you'll find all the classroom assignments, labs, and exercises, as well as answers your instructor posts to student questions.


General tips for posting messages

In a CompuMaster Online Training classroom (unlike a regular classroom), you don't have to wait your turn, raise your hand, or worry about interrupting someone else. Just speak up!

Below are some rules of thumb to help you post messages effectively.

Found some new source of information that you think other students in the class could use? Post it. The more you participate, the more you'll get out of the class.

Please don't e-mail your course questions to the instructor--post them in the classroom. If you have a question, chances are that other students have the same question. When your instructor answers your question in the classroom, it's answered for your classmates, as well.

Read the existing messages before posting a new message. Someone else may already have posted--and even answered--your question.

Include a meaningful subject for each message that you post. Remember that when someone is looking at the message tree in the left frame, your message subject is all they have to go by.

Do not post messages that have personal attacks, profanity, flame language or insulting names. CompuMaster Online Training has the same standards of conduct expected in any educational environment. Messages violating these guidelines will be removed from public view without notice to the writer. You may wish to review the CompuMaster Online Training Terms and Conditions.


General tips for posting homework

Wondering what to do with your homework? The answer varies from class to class. In HTML-related classes, for example, you may be posting your homework as pages in your own Web site. In other classes, you may be posting your homework as messages in the classroom. In still other classes, you may not need to submit your homework unless you have a question about it or need some specific help.

Most instructors include information about how and where to post homework when they make the homework assignments. If you miss that information or are still unsure what to do, ask the instructor or training assistant by posting a message in the classroom.


Why you can't use an offline reader at CompuMaster Online Training

There are a number of programs--such as Web Whacker--that will automatically download a Web page and all its graphics, or even a whole Web site, for you. These programs, which are sometimes called offline readers but are actually simple Web robots, work by "walking" through a Web site, following every link on a page, and downloading every page and graphic they find.

Unfortunately, these robots are not yet very smart, so in a CompuMaster Online Training message board, they'll click on every link they find, including the buttons next to all of your posted messages. To avoid problems, we must ask you not to use any of the current Web robots.

The best way to view CompuMaster Online Training lessons or other information offline is either to print them out or to cut and paste material into a word processing file. If you choose to do this, remember that all CompuMaster Online Training material is copyrighted and may not be distributed.




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