Let's be honest: online courses look easy until you hit week 3. Suddenly, you have 4 discussion
posts, a quiz, and a midterm due Sunday at 11:59 PM. Here is what 10 years of saving students
has taught me about who passes and who panics.
Master The Foundation First
Most students fail because they skip the basics. If you are taking take my class for me in
Calculus (CALC 101), don't touch an integral until you master the Unit Circle. If you need to
take my course for me in Nursing (NUR 301), memorize your NANDA-I diagnoses before trying to
write a care plan. Professors build exams on these foundations. Miss them, and you crumble.
Don't Use Chegg as a Crutch
It is tempting to just copy answers, but platforms like Canvas now track "window focus" and IP
logs. If you find someone to take my online class on a cheat site, you risk an immediate flag.
Instead, use tools like Desmos for graphing or Paul's Online Math Notes to actually learn the
concept. If you are drowning, it is safer to hire a human expert than to gamble with a bot.
Respect the 'Sunday Scaries'
The biggest lie is "I'll do it on the weekend." In data-heavy courses like Statistics (STAT 201),
concepts like "hypothesis testing" and "p-values" take time to sink in. If you wait until
Sunday, you will panic. And panic leads to bad decisions, like using AI writers that get
confirmed by Turnitin. Plan your work on Wednesday. Your GPA will thank you.
This advice won't guarantee an A/B, but it gives you a fighting chance. And if life gets too
crazy? We are here to help.