I think if you had the choice (eg. no other circumstances preventing you from doing it) you really
should study on campus.
A lot of those who haven't been to uni are saying they'll go for the social atmosphere, it's true but i dont think it's true in the way they think it.
In first year everyone joins a tonne of clubs and things like that but very few people actually end up going to them. The vast majority of clubs out there (excluding sporting clubs) don't really do things on a weekly basis. Only a handful of people are constantly partying throughout the week, every week too.
But I've also heard that in a lot of cases uni isn't actually very social place at all. You can go to uni in and out of lectures without really talking to anyone or meeting people. In uni it is quite common now for students in many situations to mostly talk to one another during practicals or perhaps in tutorials only.
The social aspect that a lot of people come to realise is just simply meeting new people or talking to people you've never talked to before. You obviously won't become super-best buddies with everyone you meet, probably most people you meet (depending on the course but you do end up having to interact with a fair few people). It's more just talking to a lot of people.
I can't speak for other courses but science is real great for that. You pretty much *have* to talk to your lab partner and depending on the experiment, there's a lot of downtime over the 3 hour labs, end up yakking a fair bit. You also end up talking to everyone else on your lab bench too.
No one really talks during lectures (for obvious reasons) anyway.
It really is what you make of it and what your expectations are. If you join tonnes of clubs and stuff, it'll be a bit different from never going ever.
The few arts unit's i've done were a real downer (compared to labs) for socialising though. Either no one said anything during the tutes, even for questions or they were all busy working and never really said much.
I don't see how it can work for science. How can you have lab classes online? How can you have research experience in experiments without being physically there?
Monash chemistry sent out chemicals and things like that.
Not sure about any other course.
Honestly though, we're social animals.
If you're studying online and dont otherwise have a job/whatever other commitments you'd just sit around at home all day.
I don't know if sitting around in a constant enviroment like that is very healthy.
I mean you could go all day without hearing someone else voice or something insane like that.