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1)Less distraction

If students learn online, they can easily be distracted. They might see an
interesting program they like and click into it, therefore distracting them
from the lesson. There can be no such thing in offline classes, because
students don’t have a screen in front of them the whole time they study.
Although they can certainly talk to each other, the teacher could tell
them to stop, but in online classes, the teacher won’t know what his or
her students are doing.
2)Increases student competition
Offline classrooms improve student engagement, and when students get
excited about something, they might participate more in class activities.
Like when the teacher thinks up a new and fun game to learn
vocabulary, and students who weren’t listening joined in, had fun and
learned new words with their classmates. Students tend to interact with
one another, which leads to higher learning.

3)More attention

Attention comes naturally and effortlessly to both students and teachers


in an offline scenario rather than online. Because a teacher may devote
more attention to specific students in a classroom, children prefer to pay
more attention to avoid being called out by the teacher. This simplifies
the comprehension of the lesson for both the teacher and the students.

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