Pro and Cons for learning Kannada offline vs online
Kannada is spoken in various regional dialects, although the written version is well standardised. There are also caste-based and social-status-based social groups. The three varieties of colloquial Kannada, depending on socioeconomic background, are Brahmin, non-Brahmin, and Untouchable. The standard or prestigious, variant is based on the middle-class, educated Brahmin dialect of the Mysore-Bangalore region. There is a substantial difference between the spoken and written forms of the language in terms of phonology, syntax, and vocabulary.
Let us analyze both these methods in detail to derive which method, online or offline is the most convenient and effective for Kannada learners.
Online education
Online education is electronically supported learning that relies on the Internet for teacher/student interaction and the distribution of class materials!
Pros:
Learning Kannada via the Online Education route provides innumerable convenient, flexible learning opportunities independent of a physical location. A learner could learn anytime, anywhere! Works great for people in a transferable/travelling job.
Technology advancements have made it possible to take Kannada classes from a device as small as a smartphone, giving you quick access to your classes. To top it up, we have plenty of great apps teaching Kannada, as of date!
Online classes achieve what offline classes just can’t! Effective one on one student-teacher interaction, that’s not just limited to interactive students, but also ropes in the ‘introverts’ of a class! Kannada is not an easy language for someone who doesn’t talk in a dialect closer to Kannada! FSI recommends 1100 hours to learn Kannada!
Is a great option when various costs such as infrastructure, and hardware(furniture, fittings, etc) are deterring a great team to deliver quality education to learners present anywhere in the world. It’s a great option for Kannada language learners who are learning it from a location out of India.
With online education, Kannada can be taught to students at remote locations.
With E-Materials available online students save the cost of Kannada books to read.
Online learning delimits learners’ access to teachers around the world, allowing them to study from more competent and specialized Kannada teachers around the world.
Online learning offers ease of learning, focussed study materials and comfort to Kannada Students as compared to offline mode of classes.
Students witness how the current technology scenario of teaching, from digital devices, has become a trend and how it opens up an ocean of several newer Kannada translation technologies, keyboards, platforms besides user-friendly Kannada UI interfaces that didn’t exist previously. This educates them on a far greater level than just academics and also makes them tech-savvy soon enough!
Online learning promotes Kannada users to be prompt, wrt time for classes, in students making them more responsible and self-disciplined to their
E-Learning also opens up students to endless possibilities and opportunities, by expanding their purview of expectations and thinking perspectives on what is achievable in future with this new skill – Kannada!
Online classes enable students from all around the world to interact with each other, thus breaking all possible physical and political boundaries of the world to discuss topics from the moon to mars, anything under the sun to achieve a global perspective, all in Kannada. It is such a pleasure to ears besides getting enlightened about several aspects unknown to us.
Cons:
An added complication in online Kannada classes is the lack of technical knowledge/operating skills of the devices, or proper internet especially in remote areas when accessing online classes that add to a student’s misery trying to learn FSI Grade IV languages such as Kannada.
Few students are unable to process the idea of learning Kannada online in their mind, as a result, they get detached, laid back, refrain from participation, resort to absence from active running classes, unable to treat the Kannada language classes seriously.
Online Kannada classes are forced to remain academically focused as it is impossible to achieve extracurricular activities effectively through them unless there are live classes.
Recorded classes unable to build Kannada learning confidence in a student or clear their doubts..
Traditional/offline education refers to the learning by a student, and imparting of education and knowledge by a teacher, in a facility(generally a classroom or any other place of study). Offline classes deeply emphasize regular attendance and are said to help in the overall personality development of a student.
Pros:
Classrooms oozing with liveliness are activity hubs that encourage easy and efficient learning amongst students by way of mutual competition conducive to learning Kannada.
Kannada Classroom learning is incomplete without talking about the social, economic, cultural and religious of the region of its origin, besides differences existing between students/teachers. It provides an experience to mould and help students to grow and mature, both emotionally and sensibly, by exposing them to all such crucial aspects to help them accept and respect the differences. Kannada learning also helps students to adapt and be aware of the needs of a classmate with handicaps/challenges.
A classroom environment develops students’ apt Kannada communication and listening skills, presentation skills, planning and enterprise skills, enabling them to be more organized and planned in life.
Onsite Classes are high energy zones, that beckon each student in a healthy competitive, collaborative environment, to participate in interactions, Kannada debates, arguments, express and voice their opinions confidently.
Offline Kannada classes facilitate feedback to students on their learning and conduct while interacting with other students thereby laying equal emphasis on values and morals
Offline classes provide an avenue of participation in a much larger variety of Kannada extracurricular activities, promoting team spirit building, and facilitating inculcation of leadership skills by means of motivation and collaboration.
Classroom interaction between students also prepares them by sharpening their Kannada skills in conducting themselves in a competitive environment.
Offline classes encourage critical thinking, develop conflict resolution skills and impart students the ‘crucial’ ‘clever know-how’, and ‘wisdom’, of how to skillfully manoeuvre around, moderate Kannada discussions arguments, debates, network and conduct themselves in public interactions around the world after successfully learning the language.
Cons:
While all schools try to keep the best Kannada faculty possible, however occasionally students encounter an incompetent Kannada teaching faculty a concern that stresses them out, laying the burden of learning and understanding, on them completely.
A classroom setting witnesses a tendency of spoon-feeding by Kannada teachers in a bid to complete the course thereby decreasing impromptu thinking by a student.
Classroom learning also tends to give a false impression to all teachers about ‘proximity to students’ hence, encouraging occasional ignorance of providing practical knowledge under a ‘next time’ or ‘some other time’ tag. So the students miss that connection of Kannada with practical life
While a teacher can watch all students in a class, he/she is unable to pay equal attention to the students or ensure they are all at the same Kannada learning level! This is primarily why most school students resort to tuition after school.
Some students tend to use the classroom mode of learning, as an opportunity for social interaction and engage in constant talking deviating from the topic, while also disturbing the class, making it difficult for the teacher to conduct the class with a not so easy language!
A classroom setting promotes greater interaction between peer students and lesser interaction between students and teachers
Finally,
Kannada is one of India’s 22 official languages as well as 14 regional languages. By 2021, the number of Kannada internet users is anticipated to reach 25 million. Kannada is spoken in around 20 dialects (Ethnologue). They’re often divided into three categories: northern, southern, and central. It is one of India’s scheduled languages and the official and administrative language of Karnataka, with the greatest number of speakers of any Dravidian language and the second-highest number of speakers of any Indian language. Nearby languages like as Tamil, Telugu, Marathi, and others have affected all of the dialects. Kannada has a thousand-year literary tradition that is unbroken.
There’s an amazing new way to learn Kannada! Want to see what everyone’s talking about!