Julie,
Afterthought: The best thing to do is find a local yarn shop where the people are friendly. They often have groups that meet after hours on a given day, and visit while they knit. That's a great way to learn from the others. Knitters are amazingly helpful to beginners.
Churches often have similar groups---there it is known as the Needlework Guild. At the yarn shop it's usually called a Stitch'n'Bitch.
End of afterthought...
Socks are traditionally knit on a set of double pointed needles (we call them DPN's)--either 4 or 5 to a set. I believe this is what Joan will teach, and she has mentioned including a set of DPNs in the kit if you need them.
If you see any sets of needles that are short (6" or so) and pointed on both ends, they are used for socks (or mittens, anything small that's knitted in the round. There exist longer ones, too.
3 or 4 needles cover the circumference of the sock in a triangle or square, then the extra needle is used to knit with---it goes "into the sock" and the one from which we just knitted the stitches, becomes the one to knit the next part. You may be able to see it as I'm trying on this sock with 4 needles in it. 3 of them are blue, one is red:

Alternatively we could use circular needles. These socks in progress are each being knit on a short circular. The sock just sort of slides around the needle as we knit.

Finally there are methods of knitting 2 socks at once. The one I've tried uses 2 circular needles. Here are 2 socks in the beginning stage, which may give you an idea. It's as though they were strung side by side on two long straight needles, but the flexible cable allows me to pick up the point on the left, and knit across from right to left; then turn over & do the same thing with the back side. The main thing is to remember to let go the working yarn of the right-hand sock when it's time to start the left hand one; it being rather difficult to walk if your socks are knitted together. 
Last edited by fluter; 18th January 09 at 09:14 PM.
Ken Sallenger - apprentice kiltmaker, journeyman curmudgeon,
gainfully unemployed systems programmer
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