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It has been a week since I started spring semester with an online lecture at a university. As the Corona19 situation continued, the colleges decided to extend the online course, which was originally planned for two weeks, but students are complaining that there are many poor online courses.

This is reporter Yoo Su-hwan.

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This is an online lecture at a Korean foreign language university.

Because it is a 2 credit course, it takes 50 minutes and ends in 33 minutes.

There are also subjects that rehearse a few years ago.

[Mr. Kim / Student at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies: Some professors upload old lectures and upload lectures taken five years ago.]

Although it is a three-credit course that is held for three hours a week, some professors have not posted any online videos with their lectures delayed after the opening of the course.

[Mr. Kim / Student at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies: This class is not being conducted at all. (Not in progress) The two-week lecture was decided to be reinforced during offline classes.]

There have also been cases in the Yonsei University community where classes have been replaced by placing TV documentaries online and writing appreciation sentences.

Online classes are even more challenging for students with hearing impairments.

I usually got a support from an interpreter, and followed the lecture by looking at the shape of the professor's mouth.

[Hyunjin Park / University with hearing impairment: (looking at the lecture) I was surprised. I can't see the professor's face. (Lecture) I was curious about the content. The professor wears a mask and lectures, or there are no subtitles (in online lectures) ... .]

A college student decided to file a constitutional claim that the university was refusing to reduce tuition due to lack of legislation despite poor online lectures.

(Video coverage: Youngchun Chun, Video editing: Sungwon Ha, Screen provided by Sves News)

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