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Study.com Free Closed [?] Social Sciences Book distribution Curriculum Digital library Interest and debt SQL SQL+Server

Build your earth science vocabulary and learn about cycles of matter and types of sedimentary rocks through the Education Portal course Earth Science 101: Earth Science. Our series of video lessons and accompanying self-assessment quizzes can help you boost your scientific knowledge ahead of the Excelsior Earth Science exam . This course was designed by experienced educators and examines both science basics, like experimental design and systems of measurement, and more advanced topics, such as analysis of rock deformation and theories of continental drift.

Starts : 2014-09-08
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FutureLearn Free Closed [?] Social Sciences Robotics Interest and debt Nursing+research Nutrition Security+regulations SQL

How a psychological understanding of our emotions and behaviour can give us new ways to improve mental health and well-being.

Starts : 2014-10-06
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FutureLearn Free Closed [?] Social Sciences Calculus+II Nutrition Security+regulations

Learn how maritime archaeology investigates our changing relationship with the world’s oceans and seas, from 2.5 million years ago until today.

Starts : 2015-05-05
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Iversity Free Closed [?] Public Affairs & Law English History+of+Math Kadenze

Course Summary

The study of the EU as an international actor has become a key element in European and International Law, European Studies and International Relations. The EU represents the world’s largest trade power and aid donor, has a diplomatic service larger than that of most states, and has launched more than 20 civil-military operations. It has presented itself as a normative, global actor, and its emergence as a legal entity that is neither a state nor a classic international organization has both puzzled and fascinated legal scholars and political scientists alike. We represent a consortium consisting of the Global Governance Programme of the European University Institute in Florence, the Leuven Centre for Global Governance Studies and the Chair for European and International Economic Law at the University of Passau. We have joined forces guided by the vision of providing cutting-edge expertise on the many facets of this fast-evolving topic to the greatest number of students.

What will I learn?

At the end of the course you will …

  • be able to identify and understand the main challenges of the EU and its Member States in the world today, and how they affect us personally
  • understand the means which the EU has at its disposal to tackle these challenges, and learn ways to critically evaluate its performance.
  • understand and be able to apply the key legal principles and political realities governing EU external relations, its relationship with its Member States and citizens, and the outside world.
  • situate the EU as an international actor into the main theoretical approaches to International Relations, and harness these approaches to analyse current topics in global politics.

What do I have to know?

Basic knowledge in one or more of the following subjects is highly recommended:

  • The EU and its institutions / EU politics
  • EU / International law
  • International relations / politics, foreign policy.

Course Schedule

05 May 2015: Chapter 1 - Introduction: The EU in the New World Order

11 May 2015: Chapter 2 - The EU and Sustainable Development

18 May 2015: Chapter 3 - The EU as an International Security Actor

25 May 2015: Chapter 4 - The EU and its Neighbourhood

01 June 2015: Chapter 5 - Promoting Human Rights and the Rule of Law

08 June 2015: Chapter 6 - The EU in the Global Economic Order

23 June 2015/29 June 2015: Proctored exam week

Line-up of contributors

Geert De Baere

is Associate Professor of International Law and EU Law at the Institute for European Law and the Leuven Centre for Global Governance Studies, KU Leuven. From 2007 to 2009, he worked as a référendaire at the Court of Justice of the EU. He is the author of Constitutional Principles of EU External Relations (Oxford University Press 2008).

Marise Cremona

is Professor of European Law at the European University Institute (EUI). She joined the EUI in 2006, was Head of the Law Department between October 2009 and June 2012, and President ad interim of the EUI between June 2012 and August 2013. She is a co-director of the Academy of European Law and a General Editor of the Collected Courses of the Academy (Oxford University Press); a member of the International Advisory Board of the Centre for European Research, University of Göteborg, Sweden; a member of the Advisory Board of the European Foreign Affairs Review; a member of the Editorial Board of the European Law Review, and a member of the Editorial Board, Studies in EU External Relations, Martinus Nijhoff Publishers. 
Her areas of interest include EU external relations, trade and development policy, common foreign and security policy, European neighbourhood policy and enlargement, and the institutional and constitutional law of the EU.
Professor Cremona holds a BA honours degree from Somerville College, Oxford, and an LLM in International Law from Darwin College, Cambridge. Previously, she held the professorship of European Commercial Law at Queen Mary University of London.

Giorgia Giovannetti

Professor of Economics at the University of Florence and Visiting Fellow at the European University Institute. Scientific Director of the European Report on Development in 2009 and 2010 and former Director of the Research Centre of the Italian Trade Institute (2005-2007). Advising the Italian Treasury and Ministry of Foreign Trade (2002-2013).

Christoph Herrmann

Professor of European and International Economic Law at the University of Passau. His research focuses on the relationship between the EU and the international economic legal order, in particular EU trade policy as well as the Eurozone and its relations with the IMF and other international actors. Editor of the European Yearbook of International Economic Law (EYIEL), listed on the indicative list of panelists of the WTO and was the case author of the ELSA EMC2 WTO Law Moot Court (2012/13). Author of several monographs and textbooks on EU law and international trade law.

Joëlle Hivonnet

European External Acrion Service (EEAS), China Division, where she is contributing to the implementation of the EU-China strategic partnership. European Official since 1992. Worked previously in Brussels, New York and Geneva.

Frank Hoffmeister

Head of Unit at DG Trade in the European Commission. Formerly member of the Legal Service at the European Commission (2002-2009) and Deputy Head of Cabinet in Commissioner De Gucht’s Cabinet on International Trade (2010-2014). Part- time Professor at the Vrije Universiteit Brussels for International Economic Law.

Stephan Keukeleire

Jean Monnet Professor in European Integration and EU Foreign Policy, University of Leuven and Visiting Professor at the College of Europe (Bruges), Belgium. Director of the 'Master in European Studies: Transnational and Global Perspectives' and 'Master in European Politics and Policies' at the University of Leuven. His theoretical research focuses on the analysis of foreign policy in an era of globalisation, with the concept of 'structural foreign policy' being at the heart of his research. Coordinator of the Online Resource Guide 'Exploring EU Foreign Policy': www.eufp.eu. Co-author of ‘The BRICS and other Emerging Power Alliances in the Asia-Pacific and Global South: Challenges for the EU and its View on Multilateralism’ (Journal of Common Market Studies, 2014) and of the widely used textbook 'The Foreign Policy of the European Union' (Palgrave Macmillan 2014, 2nd ed.).

Joris Larik

is Senior Researcher at The Hague Institute for Global Justice and Associate Fellow at the Leuven Centre for Global Governance Studies, KU Leuven. His work focuses on global governance reform, global normative frameworks, the legal and policy aspects of EU external relations, comparative and multilevel constitutional law and comparative regional integration. Dr. Larik initiated the Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) on The EU & Global Governance and served as its Academic Coordinator during the first edition in 2014. He continues to be a contributor and adviser to the second edition.

Lei Liu

is an associate professor at the School of Public Administration of Sichuan University, China . He holds a Doctor’s degree from Peking University in Environmental Science. He was a Jean-Monnet postdoctoral fellow at the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies (Climate Governance research strand) of European University Institute (Sep. 2013- Sep. 2014), and also a visiting scholar of the Ostroms' Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis at Indiana University in the US (Sep. 2009- Sep. 2010). His research interests include Environmental Governance, Energy Policy and Global Climate Policy.

Sabrina Marchetti

is the Academic Coordinator of this MOOC. She is currently Jean Monnet post-doctoral fellow at the Robert Schuman Centre of the European University Institute in Florence. She received her PhD in Gender and Ethnicity from the University of Utrecht in 2010. As visiting fellow, she has been at the University of Linköping, at the University of Southern California, and at Delhi University. She has worked for Kassel University and the Metropolitan University in London, and with various non-academic research centres such as ISFOL in Italy, and IIED in the UK. She has mainly specialised on issues of gender and migration, with a specific focus on the question of migrant domestic work. From a comparative perspective, she has studied the case of Filipino, Eritrean and Afro-Surinamese migrants in Italy and the Netherlands. Her current project focuses on the case of Eastern European home-carers in Italy on the basis of interviews with workers and their employers.

Frederik Naert

Member of the Legal Service of the Council of the European Union (external relations directorate) and Affiliated Senior Researcher at the Institute for International Law, KU Leuven. Member of the editorial board of the Military Law & Law of War Review / Revue de droit militaire et de droit de la guerre and a member of the Board of Directors of the International Society for Military Law & Law of War. Author of International Law Aspects of the EU’s Security and Defence Policy, with a Particular Focus on the Law of Armed Conflict and Human Rights (Intersentia 2009).

Timea Pal

Jean Monnet postdoctoral fellow at the Global Governance Programme of the EUI. She is also part of the Global Economics research group within the EUI’s Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies (RSCAS). She is a political economist working on the governance of global production chains, and on their implications on sustainable economic development in emerging economies.

Roman Petrov

is Jean Monnet Chair in EU Law at the National University of Kyiv-Mohyla Academy since 2010 and Head of Jean Monnet Centre of Excellence in European Studies at the same university since 2011. Lectured the very first Jean Monnet Module in EU law in Ukraine at the Donetsk National University. Former Max Weber Fellow at the EUI 2006-2008. Author of one of the first Ukrainian textbooks on EU Law. Founder and first elected President of the Ukrainian European Studies Association. Frequently provides expertise on EU law to state institutions in Ukraine, including the Constitutional Court of Ukraine and Ministry of Justice.

Kolja Raube

Senior Researcher, Leuven Centre for Global Governance Studies and Programme Coordinator, Centre for European Studies, KU Leuven. Heads the interdisciplinary research project The Rule of Law – A Strategic Priority of the European Union’s External Action. Author of Die Verfassungsauβenpolitik der Europäischen Union (The constitutional foreign policy of the Europrean Union) (Nomos 2007).

Anna Triandafyllidou

is Professor at the Global Governance Programme (GGP) of the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies (RSCAS), European University Institute. Within the GGP she coordinates the Research Area on Cultural Pluralism. Before joining the Programme, she was part time professor at the RSCAS (2010-2012). During the period 2004-2012, she was Senior Fellow at the Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy (ELIAMEP) in Athens where she headed a successful migration research team. She has been Visiting Professor at the College of Europe in Bruges since 2002, and is the Editor-in-Chief of the Journal of Immigrant and Refugee Studies. Her main areas of research and teaching are the governance of cultural diversity, migration, and nationalism from a European and international perspective. Over the past 15 years, she co-ordinated 30 international research projects in these research fields. Her publications include five authored books and 19 edited and co-edited volumes. For a full list see www.annatriandafyllidou.com.

Jan Wouters

Director of the Leuven Centre for Global Governance Studies, Full Professor of International Law and International Organizations, and Jean Monnet Chair ad personam EU and Global Governance, KU Leuven. Visiting Professor at Sciences Po (Paris), Luiss University (Rome) and the College of Europe (Bruges). Inter alia, President of the United Nations Association Flanders Belgium, Of Counsel at Linklaters, Brussels, Member of the Royal Flemish Academy of Belgium for Sciences and Arts. Editor of the International Encyclopedia of Intergovernmental Organizations, Deputy Director of the Revue belge de droit international and an editorial board member in ten international journals. Widely published on international, EU, corporate and financial law (more than 50 books, 100 international journal articles and 150 international book chapters).

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CourseSites Free Social Sciences Accounting+capital

This open course uses the sesquicentennial of President Lincoln's issuance of the emancipation proclamation in 1863, to explore what happened in the United States before emancipation, how emancipation worked once...

Starts : 2014-09-01
No votes
edX Free Closed [?] Social Sciences Business Nutrition

学习运用计算思维分析社会学、经济学问题的方法,加深对某些生活现象的理解,体会计算与社会科学的互动。

Starts : 2014-02-04
No votes
edX Free Closed [?] Social Sciences English Business Chemokines Fine Arts Global development KIx Nutrition

Alexander the Great conquered most of the world known to the ancient Greeks, fused the eastern and western peoples of his empire, and became a god – before his 33rd birthday. This course explores the life, leadership, and legacies of history’s warrior, and one of its most controversial leaders, an ambiguous genius whose story helps us to understand not only the history of warfare, but also different ideas about human sexuality, the history of relations between east and west, and the religious beliefs both of ancient polytheists and modern monotheists.

Before your course starts, try the new edX Demo where you can explore the fun, interactive learning environment and virtual labs. Learn more.

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Saylor.org Free Closed [?] Social Sciences Nutrition SQL Taking derivatives Undergraduate.htm%252525253Fstart%252525253D1400&limit%252525253D20.htm%2525253Fcategoryid%2525253D7

This course will introduce you to cognitive psychology, or the study of the ways in which we come to know about the world around us and about one another.  While you may understand “cognition” as “thinking” or “thoughts,” we will here use the term to refer to almost any process that takes place within the human mind. Though cognitive psychology as a formal branch of study has only been around since the late 1960s, it has been studied for decades as an area of interest in psychological inquiry and has its roots in philosophy.  In the late 1880s, for example, Ebbinghaus conducted some of the very first scientifically based studies of cognition when he attempted to explain the mechanism of memory.  Memory, along with attention, perception, language, and decision making, are amongst the most prominent issues within the broad and diverse field of cognitive psychology.  While we could spend an entire semester exploring just one of these issues, this course will instead provide you with an overview…

Starts : 2016-04-04
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edX Free Closed [?] Social Sciences English Biology Book distribution Business Computer storage Nutrition Udemy

How can we get people to save more money, eat healthy foods, engage in healthy behaviors, and make better choices in general? There has been a lot written about the fact that human beings do not process information and make decisions in an optimal fashion. This course builds on much of the fascinating work in the area of behavioral economics and allows learners to develop a hands-on approach by understanding its methods and more importantly, how it can be harnessed by suitably designing contexts to “nudge” choice.

In three modules, learners will be able to a). explain and interpret the principles underlying decision-making and compare the nudging approach to other methods of behavior change, b). learn how to critique, design and interpret the results of experiments; and c). design nudges and decision-tools to help people make better decisions.

Understanding experimental design and interpretation is central to your ability to truly use behavioral economics and will set you apart from people who merely know about the behavioral research. After the first two weeks learning the basic principles, we will devote two weeks to studying experimental design and analysis, and the final two weeks to understanding processes for designing nudges and for helping people make better decisions.

You will also witness and participate in weekly topical debates on various topics like “does irrationality impact welfare?” or “what strategy is better for improving welfare – nudging or education?” If you’ve been fascinated with the buzz surrounding behavioral economics but are not sure how to actually use it, this course is for you.

Several leading scholars, policy makers, business people, authors and commentators will briefly join our debate and discussion sections. These guest lecturers include Professor Sendhil Mullainathan (Harvard University), Professor John Lynch (University of Colorado), Rory Sutherland (Ogilvy Group), Owain Service (Behavioural Insights Team, UK Cabinet Office), Shankar Vedantam (NPR Columnist and Author – The Hidden Brain), Professors Andrew Ching, Avi Goldfarb, Nina Mazar, and Claire Tsai, Min Zhao (University of Toronto) and many others!

Starts : 2014-09-15
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Coursera Free Social Sciences BabsonX Chemokines Nutrition

本课程旨在加深学员对中国历史与古代社会生活的认识;促进对传统文化核心观点与基本精神的理解与把握;培养文化研究初步方法。

Starts : 2016-01-25
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edX Free Closed [?] Social Sciences English Biology Book distribution Business Gravitation Nutrition Udemy

Who are the winners and losers of globalization? What should be done to improve outcomes for all?

This course will examine how the spread of trade, investment, and technology across borders affects firms, workers, and communities in developed and developing countries. It investigates who gains from globalization and who is hurt or disadvantaged by globalization. Global experts from public and private sectors share insights on current trends and challenges. Course participants will develop their global acumen and will learn about issues faced by leaders in today’s international business and public policy environment.  

Starts : 2017-02-20
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edX Free Closed [?] Social Sciences English Business Chemokines Data Sufficiency Fine Arts How to Succeed

Course videos are presented in Mandarin with English subtitles.

China's architectural history spans thousands of years. In this course, we will explore the ancient cities of Chang'an of Han, Luoyang of Northern Wei, Chang'an and Luoyang of Sui and Tang, Kaifeng of Song and Dadu of Yuan, and delve into the history of the awe-inspiring ancient buildings that still grace the landscape of these bustling cities. The course will cover construction and aesthetics of these imperial palaces, religious structures, pagodas, tombs and gardens. We will study the basis of Chinese architecture, the wood framed building, as well as the brick and stone construction of many Buddhist pagodas and tombs. The course will culminate in an examination of the Summer Palace in Beijing, the ancient royal garden at the Chengde Mountain Resort, and the private gardens of the Ming and Qing dynasties. Two seminal textbooks on the Song and Qing dynasties are included in the course in electronic form.

关于本课程

数千年的中国历史上,曾出现了很多伟大的城市,汉长安、北魏洛阳、隋唐长安和洛阳、北宋开封、元大都,都是当时世界上最繁华的大都市。这些城市虽已星光黯淡,却留下了一座座优美壮丽的建筑杰作,令人叹为观止。中国的宫殿、宗教建筑、佛塔、陵寝和园林等建筑类型,无论建造技术还是美学追求,都达到了很高的水平。中国古代的建筑有着自成体系的一套营造方法,以木结构为主,也有不少砖石结构的佛塔和陵寝。历史上建造了大量宫殿建筑,北京故宫是现存世界上最大宫殿建筑群。自南北朝至唐,出现了大批佛教寺院与石窟寺。南北朝以来各地建造的砖石塔,也使中国砖石建筑达到很高水平。唐、辽、宋、金时期留下了一大批宗教建筑遗存,包括大型殿堂,多层楼阁,与高度达67米的高层木塔。明清时期坛壝、祠庙、陵墓与民居,有了高度发展,北京天坛,曲阜孔庙、明十三陵,北京四合院等,是这一时期重要建筑实例。北京颐和园、承德避暑山庄是古代皇家园林代表,明清私家园林则是数千年中国园林艺术的结晶。宋《营造法式》和清《工部工程做法则例》是中国官式建筑两部重要文本,对于理解中国建筑有着重要的意义。课程资料中也将包括这两部著作的电子版。    

Before your course starts, try the new edX Demo where you can explore the fun, interactive learning environment and virtual labs. Learn more.

Starts : 2013-09-01
No votes
MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) Free Social Sciences Infor Information environments Information Theory Kadenze Nutrition

This course explores the leading theoretical and methodological approaches to studying China's interaction with the international system since 1949. Readings include books and articles that integrate the study of China's foreign policy with the field of international relations.

Starts : 2017-09-12
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edX Free Closed [?] Social Sciences English product differentiation and variety Business Fine Arts Information technology Nutrition

How do we understand architecture? One way of answering this question is by looking through the lens of history, beginning with First Societies and extending to the 16th century. This course in architectural history is not intended as a linear narrative, but rather aims to provide a more global view, by focusing on different architectural "moments."

How did the introduction of iron in the ninth century BCE impact regional politics and the development of architecture? How did new religious formations, such as Buddhism and Hinduism, produce new architectural understandings? What were the architectural consequences of the changing political landscape in northern Italy in the 14th century? How did rock-cut architecture move across space and time from West Asia to India to Africa? How did the emergence of corn impact the rise of religious and temple construction in Mexico?

Each lecture analyzes a particular architectural transformation arising from a dynamic cultural situation. Material covered in lectures will be supplemented by readings from the textbook A Global History of Architecture.

Join us on a journey around the globe and learn how architecture has developed and interacted with the world’s culture, religion, and history.

Starts : 2016-10-26
No votes
edX Free Closed [?] Social Sciences English product differentiation and variety Book distribution Business How to Succeed Information policy Nutrition

3.086x: The Iterative Innovation Process draws heavily upon the course material used in 3.086x: Innovation and Commercialization. Though there have been significant changes to the course, this course is not an entirely new edX offering.

People innovate, not organizations. This course is for anybody who wants to understand the innovation process - whether you want to foster innovation within your organization or whether you want to personally innovate.

As practicing innovators, we teach you the fundamentals of how to think like an innovator. Innovation is an iterative process, not a linear one. When innovating, there are thousands of sources of uncertainty in Technology, Implementation, and Markets. We teach you how to cycle through these sources of uncertainty until the right pieces come together in an innovation.

Throughout the course, we build up the innovation process model step by step with real examples and exercises. The goal of this course is to change and refine the way you view the innovation process, providing you with the foundation on which to build your future innovation

Starts : 2015-09-15
No votes
Coursera Free Closed [?] Social Sciences English BabsonX Chemokines Nutrition Udemy

Urbanization is reaching a new peak in the contemporary world with the rise of mega cities. Researchers try to make sense of these large urban areas using a variety of concepts. The class will review debates and present social science models of cities to analyse and compare contemporary developments.

Starts : 2015-11-09
No votes
Coursera Free Closed [?] Social Sciences English BabsonX Brain stem Business Administration Curriculum Multiplying+and+factoring+expressions Nutrition

Explore current evidence linking climate change and public health while learning the fundamental co-benefits of climate change mitigation. Evaluate policies and interventions while gaining hands on experience communicating climate science and health to policy makers and the general public.

Starts : 2015-09-03
No votes
edX Free Closed [?] Social Sciences English Brain stem Business Chemokines Fine Arts Global development Information policy

As contemporary humans, we are a product of our evolutionary past. That past can be directly observed through the study of the human fossil record, the materials preserved for archaeological study, and the DNA of living and extinct human populations. This course will provide an overview of human evolutionary history from the present--contemporary human variation in a comparative context--through our last common ancestor with the living great apes, some 5-7 million years in the past. Emphasis will be placed on major evolutionary changes in the development of humans and the methodological approaches used by paleoanthropologists and related investigators to develop that knowledge.

The course will begin by asking basic questions about how evolution operates to shape biological variation and what patterns of variation look like in living humans and apes. We will then look at how the human lineage first began to differentiate from apes, the rise and fall of the Australopithecines, the origin and dispersal of the genus Homo, and eventually the radical evolutionary changes associated with the development of agricultural practices in the past 15,000 years. Throughout the course students will be exposed to the primary data, places and theories that shape our understanding of human evolution.

Starts : 2016-05-10
No votes
edX Free Closed [?] Social Sciences English Biology Business Global development Nutrition Udemy

Ever wondered why some countries are rich and others poor? Or why some people believe hard work results in upward mobility and others don’t? To answer these questions, you need to “see” the world sociologically.

In this introductory sociology course, we will explore the concerns of an interconnected global world through classic sociological concepts. Through short lectures, interviews with prominent sociologists and everyday people around the world, you will learn to see your role in the scope of global history.

No previous experience needed.

Image: Ganesh Ramachandran | www.purpleganesh.com

Starts : 2015-09-14
No votes
edX Free Closed [?] Social Sciences English Business Data Sufficiency Nutrition

Chinese archaeology is one of the fastest-growing and most exciting fields of study in China. With a wealth of cultural relics unearthed this past century, the world’s fascination with China’s rich history has been renewed. This course will examine the unique cultural relics identified by scholars as important to Chinese civilization. We will focus on the fields of agriculture, astronomy, music, metallurgy, textiles, architecture, painted pottery, jade articles, bronze ware, shipbuilding and acupuncture. We will ignite your curiosity as we explore how these treasures reveal China’s past, and guide the future of Chinese culture.

考古学在中国是发展最快且最令人兴奋的研究领域之一。在上个世纪,中国凭借丰富的文物出土,让世界在此沉迷在其悠久的历史之中。本课程将探讨被学者认定为对中国文明有着重要意义的独特文物。我们将专注于农业、天文、音乐、冶金、纺织、建筑、彩陶、玉器、青铜器、造船和针灸等领域。通过探索这些珍品是如何揭示中国的过去,并引导中国文化的未来,我们将点燃你的好奇心。

FAQ

I don’t speak Chinese, can I learn the course? 

Only the spoken language is Chinese. All the other materials are in English. There are many ways of learning this wonderful course for learners without Chinese background.

  • Use the English subtitles, which are provided with the video player of the course webpage.
  • Download the mp4 files and subtitles and use your favorite video player to watch the video.
  • Download the dubbing mp3 files. When playing the video in the course webpage, turn off the volume in the video player of the course webpage and play the mp3 files with your favorite player at the same time with proper volume. The dubbing mp3 files are synchronized with the mp4 files. It’s almost the same feeling watching a foreign movie with the English dubbing.

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