In brief: An in-person course is a learning session that brings a trainer and learners together in the same physical space. It differs from in-person training, a broader term referring to a full programme: a course is a specific pedagogical unit (a half-day, one session), whereas a training programme can encompass dozens of them. For pedagogical managers and trainers, every in-person course requires a formal attendance record, essential proof of attendance for funders and quality audits.
An in-person course, also called a face-to-face session or classroom session, is a pedagogical unit during which the trainer and learners are physically in the same place: a classroom, lecture hall, corporate training room or any dedicated space. Interaction is direct, synchronous and embodied.
It is important to distinguish between a course and a training programme. In-person training is the overall programme: a multi-day or multi-week curriculum structured around pedagogical objectives with a logical progression. An in-person course is one building block of that programme: an identifiable session, with a precise duration, defined content and an expected list of learners. This distinction is essential administratively, because it is at the course level that attendance signing takes place, and therefore proof of presence.
For trainers and administrative managers in a training organisation, an in-person course is not just a pedagogical event: it is also an administrative act. Every session must have a formalised attendance record, which constitutes legal proof that learners were present.
The traditional attendance sheet is a paper document signed by each learner at the start or end of each half-day. This format, still used in many organisations, has several drawbacks: risk of loss, potential falsification, high processing time, and no real-time access for administrative teams.
Digital attendance solutions solve these problems. With in-person attendance signing offered by Edusign, several methods are available:
In-person courses are not suited to every situation:
These limitations explain the rise of blended formats, combining targeted in-person sessions (practice, exchanges, assessments) with remote phases. The flipped classroom is an elegant example: learners absorb theory independently, and the in-person course is entirely devoted to practice and discussion.
Edusign is the reference platform for administrative management of in-person courses in training organisations, apprenticeship centres and schools. It simplifies the two main administrative constraints of a classroom session:
An in-person course is a specific pedagogical unit: a session of defined duration (a few hours or a day), with delimited content and an expected list of learners. An in-person training programme is the overall programme that brings together multiple courses, spans several days or weeks, and aims to achieve broader pedagogical objectives. Administratively, it is at course level that attendance signing takes place, and therefore proof of presence for funders.
Yes, provided the solution used meets certain requirements. Attendance sheets generated by platforms like Edusign are designed to comply with funder expectations and quality-certification criteria: precise timestamp, signatory identification, and document integrity. Regulatory authorities have explicitly opened the way to digital attendance records, on condition that data is secured and documents retained in compliant conditions.
There is no specific legal maximum duration for an in-person course, but labour regulations impose rest breaks (11 minutes after 6 hours of continuous work). In practice, trainers organise their sessions into half-days or full days with regular breaks. For funded training, the duration must correspond exactly to what is declared: a discrepancy between declared hours and signed attendance hours can result in partial or full reimbursement requirements.
Full digitisation is possible with a combination of three tools: a digital attendance tool (QR code, NFC or PIN code in the room), an electronic signature tool for agreements and regulations, and a questionnaire tool for immediate evaluations. Edusign offers all three modules in a single suite, allowing you to manage all administrative aspects of a course without paper, from enrolment to generating the final attendance certificate.
The choice depends on the type of content, learner profiles and logistical constraints. In-person is preferable for learning that requires practice, role-plays, simulations or group cohesion. Remote learning suits theoretical content, revision and geographically dispersed learners. Most training organisations are moving towards blended formats that combine the best of both: targeted in-person sessions and remote phases for less interactive content.