It's totally fine for personal use. The issue is with broadcasting or monetizing the information.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He can record the lectures himself. PP mentioned Coconote, but even Word has a built-in feature now.
He may want to ensure this is permitted first. There are laws and university rules about this that are worth consulting. This feels like an area where you could quickly spiral into trouble that I may be easily enough avoided.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a Freshman in College struggling to keep up with big lecture classes.
He's trying to take notes but can't keep up and he's not retaining much information on his own as he commonly does in regular classes.
He recently had a quiz and the notes he used didn't help him to study.
I remember using a recorder machine back in my days, is that a thing nowadays?
What has your student used to keep up with these lecture hall classes?
Recording is often offered as an accommodation through disability services if your child qualifies. I do not know if students without an accommodation are permitted to record without professor authorization. Our daughter uses recording and real time closed captioning for a hearing disability. IME Glean is really the go-to technology for recording lectures if you go down this route.
You can use any computer with a microphone to record and transcribe in real time.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a Freshman in College struggling to keep up with big lecture classes.
He's trying to take notes but can't keep up and he's not retaining much information on his own as he commonly does in regular classes.
He recently had a quiz and the notes he used didn't help him to study.
I remember using a recorder machine back in my days, is that a thing nowadays?
What has your student used to keep up with these lecture hall classes?
Recording is often offered as an accommodation through disability services if your child qualifies. I do not know if students without an accommodation are permitted to record without professor authorization. Our daughter uses recording and real time closed captioning for a hearing disability. IME Glean is really the go-to technology for recording lectures if you go down this route.
Anonymous wrote:He can record the lectures himself. PP mentioned Coconote, but even Word has a built-in feature now.
Anonymous wrote:I have a Freshman in College struggling to keep up with big lecture classes.
He's trying to take notes but can't keep up and he's not retaining much information on his own as he commonly does in regular classes.
He recently had a quiz and the notes he used didn't help him to study.
I remember using a recorder machine back in my days, is that a thing nowadays?
What has your student used to keep up with these lecture hall classes?