Online courses directory (10358)

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Starts : 2004-02-01
15 votes
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Human beings are symbol-making as well as tool-making animals. We understand our world and shape our lives in large part by assigning meanings to objects, beings, and persons; by connecting things together in symbolic patterns; and by creating elaborate forms of symbolic action and narrative. In this introductory subject we consider how symbols are created and structured; how they draw on and give meaning to different domains of the human world; how they are woven into politics, family life, and the life cycle; and how we can interpret them.

The semester will be devoted to a number of topics in symbolism.

  1. Metaphor and Other Figurative Language
  2. The Raw Materials of Symbolism, especially Animals and The Human Body
  3. Cosmology and Complex Symbolic Systems
  4. Ritual, including Symbolic Curing and Magic
  5. Narrative and Life
  6. Mythology

Related Content

Starts : 2015-12-14
No votes
Iversity Free Closed [?] English History+of+Math Line+integrals+and+Green's+theorem

The course embraces the following aspects:

  • understanding the key geological concepts, including crystal, mineral and rock;
  • applying basic methods to determine the properties of minerals and structure and texture of rocks;
  • identifying the composition, formation conditions, characteristic features of naturally-occurring and urban environment stone material and to determine its practical significance;
  • identifying rocks and minerals so as to understand their specific application in such areas as building construction, civil engineering, as well as distinguishing ornamental stones or gemstones in the collections;
  • obtaining theoretical background to further one's ability to observe and determine the practical value of rocks.

In general, this course provides an overview of some aspects of our world from a geological point of view.

Who should participate in this course?

Everyone is welcome to join us and discover the rock and mineral environment the surrounds us. Particular groups that would be interested in the course topic include:

  • Students interested in the world environment - minerals and rocks
  • Future applicants in geological specialty
  • Undergraduates studying the Earth's crust, including geology, mineralogy and petrology
  • Technical specialists and engineers in the field of geological engineering survey
  • Naturalists interested in the surrounding world and its rock components

What do I need to know?

No specific skills or prior knowledge, only self-interest, motivation and desire for self-development.

What will I learn?

The aim of the course is to understand and appreciate the surrounding inanimate nature (the Earth surface), consisting of minerals and rocks. This course will also teach you how to identify the practical importance and value of the rocks surrounding you.

By the end of the course, students will be able to:

  • distinguish crystals, minerals and rocks;
  • identify the most common minerals and rocks;
  • know their practical value and their influence on the environment.

Course Structure

Chapter 1: Crystallography and symmetry around us. Morphology of natural geological formations.

Instructor: Associate Prof. Lyudmila Ananieva

  1. Historical development of geoscience
  2. Mineralization and mineral chemical composition
  3. Crystal structure and habit
  4. Crystal morphology
  5. Aggregate morphology

Apply basic and specialised knowledge related to the structure and evolution of matter in nature; dependency of shape to internal structure and composition of natural objects (minerals, crystals, rocks)

Chapter 2: Physical properties of minerals

Instructor: Associate Prof. Lyudmila Ananieva

  1. Optical properties of minerals: color and streak
  2. Optical properties of minerals: transparency and lustre
  3. Mechanical properties of minerals: cleavage, jointing, fracture, hardness
  4. Specific properties of minerals
  5. Useful physical properties for identifying a mineral

Apply simple methods in identifying the properties of minerals

Chapter 3: Mineral Classification

Instructor: Director of the TPU Mineralogical Museum Tatyana Martynova

  1. Rock-forming minerals - salic (light in color) - very broad category
  2. Rock-forming minerals - femic (dark in color) - very broad category
  3. Mineral salts
  4. Rare minerals

Know and identify the most common minerals

Chapter 4: Ores. Gems and ornamental stones

Instructor: Director of the TPU Mineralogical Museum Tatyana Martynova

  1. Noble metals
  2. Ferrous metals
  3. Non-Ferrous metals
  4. Other metals
  5. Gemstones
  6. Ornamental stones

Know and identify ore minerals and distinguish ornamental stones and gems

Chapter 5: Igneous rocks

Instructor: Associate Prof. Lyubov Krasnoshchekova

  1. Formation conditions of igneous rocks ( magma and lava-definitions, igneous crystallisation)
  2. Morphology and settings of igneous rocks
  3. Composition, structure and texture of igneous rocks
  4. Common volcanic (extrusive) rocks
  5. Common plutonic (intrusive) rocks

Identify and determine the most common igneous (extrusive and intrusive) rocks among other rocks

Chapter 6: Sedimentary rocks

Instructor: Associate Prof. Lyubov Krasnoshchekova

  1. Composition, structure and texture of sedimentary rocks
  2. Formation conditions of sedimentary rocks
  3. Clastic rocks (pebbles, gravel, sand)
  4. Chemical and biochemical rocks (chalk, coquina, gypsum, salt)

Identify and recognise the most common sedimentary rocks among other rocks.

Chapter 7: Metamorphic rocks

Instructor: Associate Prof. Lyubov Krasnoshchekova

  1. Formation conditions (genesis) of metamorphic rocks: Types of metamorphism
  2. Composition, structure and texture of metamorphic rocks
  3. Common metamorphic rocks (slate, gneiss, marble) and their application
  4. Cyclic processes of naturally occurring substances

Identify and recognise metamorphic rocks; determine their transformation conditions

Starts : 2015-05-11
No votes
Coursera Free English BabsonX Curriculum Multiplying+and+factoring+expressions Nutrition

Learn about the concept of “personalised medicine” and the impact that our enhanced understanding of genetics has had on modern medicine and society.

5 votes
Open.Michigan Initiative, University of Michigan Free Health and Welfare Big data online training and certification Fertility control PennX Sap+faculty Western Civilization II

This course introduces the student to global health concepts and the network of organizations working to advance health care internationally. Emphasis for this course is on the global burden of disease and determinates of health. It will provide the student with a broad introduction to programs, systems and policies affecting global health. Students will explore facets of the global health care delivery system, health care economics and the political process and its impact on the health of individuals and populations. Course Level: Undergraduate This Work, N 420 - Perspectives in Global Health, by Jody Lori is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license.

3 votes
Open.Michigan Initiative, University of Michigan Free Health and Welfare Finance Mathematics.htm%2525253Fcategoryid%2525253D19.htm%25253Fcategoryid%25253D7.htm%3 Western Civilization II

The primary goal of this course is to promote an evidence-based approach to advanced nursing practice. Evidenced-based research findings for nursing practice will be evaluated in terms of racial, ethnic, and socioeconomic relevance. An understanding of the research process, applicable theories, organizational dynamics, and leadership functions are applied to design and process of implementing research in health care settings. This Work, N 536 - Utilization of Nursing Research in Advanced Practice, by Huey-Ming Tzeng, Sonia A. Duffy, Lisa Kane Low is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license.

Starts : 2012-02-01
No votes
MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) Free Infor Information control Information Theory International development Nutrition

Parallel treatments of photons, electrons, phonons, and molecules as energy carriers, aiming at fundamental understanding and descriptive tools for energy and heat transport processes from nanoscale continuously to macroscale. Topics include the energy levels, the statistical behavior and internal energy, energy transport in the forms of waves and particles, scattering and heat generation processes, Boltzmann equation and derivation of classical laws, deviation from classical laws at nanoscale and their appropriate descriptions, with applications in nano- and microtechnology.

Starts : 2012-02-01
8 votes
MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) Free Closed [?] Engineering Infor Information environments Information Theory International development Nutrition

Parallel treatments of photons, electrons, phonons, and molecules as energy carriers, aiming at fundamental understanding and descriptive tools for energy and heat transport processes from nanoscale continuously to macroscale. Topics include the energy levels, the statistical behavior and internal energy, energy transport in the forms of waves and particles, scattering and heat generation processes, Boltzmann equation and derivation of classical laws, deviation from classical laws at nanoscale and their appropriate descriptions, with applications in nano- and microtechnology.

Starts : 2014-07-01
No votes
Class2Go Free Closed [?] How to Succeed IEEEx Physics

Fundamentals of nanomanufacturing technology and applications.

Starts : 2013-02-01
No votes
MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) Free Before 1300: Ancient and Medieval History Infor Information control Information Theory Nutrition

This course links clean energy sources and storage technology to energy consumption case studies to give students a concept of the full circle of production and consumption. Specifically, photovoltaic, organic photovoltaic, piezoelectricity and thermoelectricity sources are applied to electrophoresis, lab on a chip, and paper microfluidic applications–relevant analytical techniques in biology and chemistry. Hands-on experimentation with everyday materials and equipment help connect the theory with the implementation. Complementary laboratories fabricating LEDs, organic LEDs and spectrometers introduce the diagnostic tools used to characterize energy efficiency.

This course is one of many OCW Energy Courses, and it is an elective subject in MIT’s undergraduate Energy Studies Minor. This Institute-wide program complements the deep expertise obtained in any major with a broad understanding of the interlinked realms of science, technology, and social sciences as they relate to energy and associated environmental challenges.

Starts : 2007-02-01
11 votes
MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) Free Infor Information control Information Theory Nutrition Principles of Management

This course focuses on the latest scientific developments and discoveries in the field of nanomechanics, the study of forces and motion on extremely tiny (10-9 m) areas of synthetic and biological materials and structures. At this level, mechanical properties are intimately related to chemistry, physics, and quantum mechanics. Most lectures will consist of a theoretical component that will then be compared to recent experimental data (case studies) in the literature. The course begins with a series of introductory lectures that describes the normal and lateral forces acting at the atomic scale. The following discussions include experimental techniques in high resolution force spectroscopy, atomistic aspects of adhesion, nanoindentation, molecular details of fracture, chemical force microscopy, elasticity of single macromolecular chains, intermolecular interactions in polymers, dynamic force spectroscopy, biomolecular bond strength measurements, and molecular motors.

Starts : 2016-10-03
No votes
edX Free Closed [?] English Business Calculus I How to Succeed Information policy Nutrition

This engineering course is an introduction to photonic materials and devices structured on the wavelength scale. Generally, these systems will be characterized as having critical dimensions at the nanometer scale. These can include nanophotonic, plasmonic, and metamaterial components and systems.

This course may be useful for advanced undergraduates with the prerequisites listed below; graduate students interested in incorporating these techniques into their thesis research; and practicing scientists and engineers developing new experiments or products based on these ideas.

Starts : 2015-03-16
No votes
Coursera Free Closed [?] Physical Sciences English BabsonX Brain stem Diencephalon How to Succeed Nutrition

Learn about novel sensing tools that make use of nanotechnology to screen, detect and monitor various events in personal or professional life. Together, we will lay the groundwork for infinite innovative applications, starting from diagnosis and treatments of diseases, continuing with quality control of goods and environmental aspects, and ending with monitoring security issues.

Starts : 2016-01-25
No votes
edX Free Closed [?] English Business Calculus I How to Succeed Nutrition

The transistor has been called the greatest invention of the 20th century – it enables the electronics systems that have shaped the world we live in. Today’s nanotransistors are a high volume, high impact success of the nanotechnology revolution. If you are interested in understanding how this scientifically interesting and technologically important nano-device operates, this course is for you!

This nanotechnology course provides a simple, conceptual framework for understanding the essential physics of nanoscale transistors.  It assumes only a basic background in semiconductor physics and provides an opportunity to learn how some of the fascinating new discoveries about the flow of electrons at the nanoscale plays out in the context of a practical device.

The course is divided into four units:

  • Transistors fundamentals
  • Transistor electrostatics
  • Ballistic MOSFETs
  • Transmission theory of the MOSFET

The first two units provide an introduction for students with no background in transistors or a quick review for those familiar with transistors.  The third unit treats the ballistic transistor in which electrons move without resistance (in the traditional sense). The last unit uses that Landauer Approach to electron transport, which was developed to understand some striking experiments in nanophysics, to develop an understanding of how electrons flow in modern nanotransistors.  This short course describes a way of understanding MOSFETs that is much more suitable than traditional approaches when the channel lengths are of nanoscale dimensions. Surprisingly, the final result looks much like the traditional, textbook, MOSFET model, but the parameters in the equations have simple, clear interpretations at the nanoscale.

My objective for this course is to provide students with an understanding of the essential physics of nanoscale transistors as well as some of the practical technological considerations and fundamental limits. The goal is to do this in a way that is broadly accessible to students with only a very basic knowledge of semiconductor physics and electronic circuits. The course is designed for anyone seeking a sound, physical, but simple understanding of how nanoscale transistors operate. The course should be useful for advanced undergraduates, beginning graduate students, as well as researchers and practicing engineers and scientists.

This course is the latest in a series offered by the nanoHUB-U project which is jointly funded by Purdue and NSF with the goal of transcending disciplines through short courses accessible to students in any branch of science or engineering. These courses focus on cutting-edge topics distilled into short lectures with quizzes and practice exams.

Starts : 2013-11-11
97 votes
Coursera Free Engineering English BabsonX Brain stem Business Administration Calculus I Curriculum Diencephalon

Nanotechnology is an emerging area that engages almost every technical discipline – from chemistry to computer science – in the study and application of extremely tiny materials.  This short course allows any technically savvy person to go one layer beyond the surface of this broad topic to see the real substance behind the very small.

No votes
Udemy Free Closed [?] Digital library Histology

The Exciting Story of the Struggle Between France, Egypt and England from 1798-1801

Starts : 2007-01-01
7 votes
MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) Free Infor Information environments Information networks Information Theory Nutrition

This eight-session course, designed for a mixed group of first, second, third and fourth-year medical students, uses literary narratives and poetry to study ethical issues in medicine. This methodology emphasizes the importance of context, contingency, and circumstances in recognizing, evaluating, and resolving moral problems. The seminar will focus on developing the skills of critical and reflective reading that increase effectiveness in clinical medicine. Texts will include short fiction and poetry by authors such as Woolf, Chekhov, Carver, Kafka, Hurston, Marquez and Tolstoy. The instructor will provide necessary philosophic and literary context at the beginning of each session, the balance devoted to class discussion. During the course, students will keep a reading journal that examines the meanings of illness, the moral role of the physician, and the relevance of emotions, culture, faith, values, social realities, and life histories to patient care.

Starts : 2004-09-01
15 votes
MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) Free Infor Information environments Information Theory Kadenze Nutrition

This course provides a broad overview of the theories of and approaches to the study of nationalist thought and practice. It also explores the related phenomena termed nationalism: national consciousness and identity, nations, nation-states, and nationalist ideologies and nationalist movements. The course analyzes nationalism's emergence and endurance as a factor in modern politics and society. Topics include: nationalism and state-building, nationalism and economic modernization, nationalism and democratization, and nationalism and religious conflict.

Starts : 2016-02-01
No votes
MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW) Free Infor Information control Information technology Information Theory Nutrition

This course studies how international modernism interacted with the concept of "nation" and how contemporary discourses concerning globalism changes that dynamic. This course also looks at how art uses and critiques globalization on various levels.

Starts : 2014-01-13
No votes
JANUX Free Closed [?] Design.htm%25252525253Fstart%25252525253D20&limit%25252525253D20.htm%252525253Fcategoryid%252525253D Information science

This course is a general introduction to the history, cultural traditions, and current condition of many of the 38 Native American tribes who reside in Oklahoma. To increase awareness and appreciation of the manners in which the Native American population of Oklahoma contributes to the unique character and capacities of our state, through cultural values, political relationships between sovereign governments, social relations in a diverse place, and enriching artistic expressions. Learners will further understand the roles that indigenous people in Oklahoma have played in national and global contexts.

Starts : 2016-01-13
No votes
edX Free Closed [?] Life Sciences English Aviation Business Calculus I Information policy Nutrition

No region on Earth is immune from natural disasters. As we gain scientific understanding into the causes and nature of such phenomena, we become better able to mitigate the effects of disasters. Yet as the world's population continues to grow, an increasingly large number of people are at risk.

This science course examines different types of natural disasters and our ability, or inability, to control and predict such events. You will gain an appreciation of natural disasters beyond the newspaper headlines, and will better understand how the effects of disasters can be reduced.

There is an urgent need for people from all walks of life to better understand the scientific principles behind the occurrence of natural disasters:

  • City planners need to know where, and where not, to site buildings.
  • Politicians need to make scientifically informed decisions.
  • Emergency management officials need to understand the nature of a potential disaster and ways to mitigate such an event.
  • Journalists need to report scientifically accurate information.

Learner Testimonial:

Professors Stix and Gyakum have created and presented an engaging course, and have helped in my quest for a better understanding of the world around me.” – Previous Student

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