What Does Studying Online Actually Look Like?

Before you enroll, you should know exactly how the day-to-day experience works. Here's a realistic look at course portals, class formats, workload, and exams at our partner universities.

The Course Portal

Your Learning Management System (LMS)

Every partner university delivers coursework through a Learning Management System (LMS) — a secure online portal where you watch lectures, submit assignments, take quizzes, message instructors, and track your grades. Popular platforms include Canvas, Blackboard, and Brightspace, and your Global Degrees advisor will walk you through your specific university's system before your first class.

  • One login for lectures, readings, assignments, and grades
  • Built-in messaging with professors and classmates
  • Progress trackers so you always know what's due next
Student using a laptop for an online course portal
Student taking notes while studying online
Class Formats

Asynchronous vs. Live Sessions

Most online programs blend two formats. Asynchronous coursework — pre-recorded lectures, readings, and discussion boards — can be completed on your own schedule within a weekly deadline, which is ideal if you're juggling work and time zones. Live (synchronous) sessions, such as seminars or office hours, happen on a set schedule but are usually recorded for playback. Your advisor helps you choose programs whose live-session timing realistically fits your time zone in the Gulf.

  • Most weekly work can be done whenever suits you
  • Live sessions are typically recorded if you can't attend live
  • Clear weekly deadlines keep you on pace without rigid daily schedules
Mobile & Anywhere Access

Study From Your Phone, Tablet, or Laptop

Most university LMS platforms have companion mobile apps, so you can review a lecture slide, reply to a classmate, or check a deadline from your phone between meetings or during a commute. Full assignments — essays, projects, exams — are generally best completed on a laptop or desktop for comfort and reliability, but nothing about your coursework requires you to be tied to one physical location.

  • Native mobile apps for most major LMS platforms
  • Download lectures for offline review while traveling
  • Study from home, the office, or anywhere across the Gulf region
Professional reviewing coursework on a mobile device
What to Expect

Typical Weekly Workload & Exams

Every program differs, but here's a general idea of what a working professional can expect.

Weekly Time Commitment

Plan for roughly 10–15 hours per week per course, including lectures, readings, and assignments — manageable alongside full-time work.

Course Length

Many programs run in shorter accelerated terms (6–8 weeks) rather than traditional 16-week semesters, so you finish faster.

Exams & Proctoring

Exam formats vary by university — from open-note online quizzes to remotely proctored tests using webcam-based proctoring software. Your advisor explains the exact format per program.

Tech Requirements

A laptop or desktop, a stable internet connection, a webcam/microphone, and standard software (usually provided free through your student account) are typically all you need.

Student Resources

Explore More Resources

Everything you need to know about support, careers, research tools, and community as an online student.

Student Support Services

Academic advising, tech support, tutoring, and wellness resources.

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Career Services

Resume help, interview prep, and career center access.

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Library & Learning Resources

Digital libraries, research databases, and citation tools.

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Alumni Network

Mentorship, regional meetups, and lifelong community.

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Testimonials & Success Stories

Read real stories from students across the Gulf region.

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FAQs

Answers to common questions about applying and studying online.

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Have More Questions About Online Learning?

Speak with a free advisor who can walk you through exactly how your chosen program works, day to day.

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