Statements A, B and C are correct, while D is the only wrong statement. A is true because in-person teaching enables the use of facial expressions, gestures and immediate discussion. B is true as many online tools allow recording of lectures, chats and shared documents for later access. C is true since educators should select modes and mixes of communication based on pedagogic aims, learner needs and resource constraints. D is false because online communication can be highly effective for many learning purposes; it is not inherently inferior in all cases.
Option A:
Option A groups A and D as wrong, though A correctly describes the richness of face-to-face interaction. Treating A as wrong contradicts established communication theory about non-verbal cues. Therefore A and D only is not a valid answer.
Option B:
Option B lists B and D as wrong, misclassifying B, which accurately notes the recordability of online sessions and messages. Including B among wrong statements makes this option inconsistent with common features of online platforms. Hence B and D only cannot be accepted.
Option C:
Option C combines C and D as wrong, even though C makes a balanced statement about choosing modes according to goals and constraints. Since C is a correct perspective on instructional design, grouping it with D as wrong is logically flawed. Consequently C and D only is not the correct answer.
Option D:
Option D correctly selects D only as the wrong statement. It accepts that both face-to-face and online communication have strengths and weaknesses and that online learning can be very effective when thoughtfully designed. By leaving A, B and C outside the wrong set as correct statements, D only is the right answer.
Comment Your Answer
Please login to comment your answer.
Sign In
Sign Up
Answers commented by others
No answers commented yet. Be the first to comment!