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From: Stanford Online<[email protected]>
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Subject: Upcoming Courses from Stanford Online
Date: Thu, 10 Oct 2013 08:52:40 +0000
PP
Hello!
Stanford Online is offering free public courses taught by Stanford faculty. Registration is
open now. Some courses start soon. Please visit a course's web page to learn how to
participate.
You can find out more about Stanford programs and the courses we offer at
online.stanford.edu.
Democratic Development
Larry Diamond
Just started!
This course is intended as a broad, introductory survey of the
political, social, cultural, economic, institutional, and
international factors that foster or obstruct the development
and consolidation of democracy. This course is primarily
intended for individuals in college or beyond, who have an
academic background or some preparation in political science
or the social sciences. However, it also meant to be accessible
and useful to a diverse international audience, including
educators at the secondary and college levels, government
officials, development professionals, civil society leaders,
journalists, bloggers, activists, and individuals involved in a
wide range of activities and professions related to the
development and deepening of democracy. It is hoped that
students in developing or prospective democracies will use the
theories, ideas, and lessons in the class to help build or
improve democracy in their own countries. The course will run
for eleven weeks.
Find out more
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Practice Based Research in the Arts
Leslie Hill, Helen Paris
Starting October 9th
This unique online course in practice-based research is
designed to facilitate and advance the work of students
pursuing an arts practice within an academic framework. Using
the online space as an open forum to make this work
accessible to peers, the course will help equip artist-scholars
with tools, frameworks and peer networks that will help them
articulate their practice within the academy and beyond. This
course will run for ten weeks.
Find out more
The Finance of Retirement & Pensions
Joshua Rauh
Starting October 14th
This course focuses on the financial concepts behind sound
retirement plan investment and pension fund management.
Course participants will become more informed decision
makers about their own portfolios, and be equipped to
evaluate economic policy discussions that surround public
pensions. Participants will do calculations in Microsoft Excel as
part of the coursework. This course will run for eight weeks.
Find out more
Machine Learning
Andrew Ng
Starting October 14th
This course provides a broad introduction to machine learning,
data mining, and statistical pattern recognition. Machine
learning is the science of getting computers to act without
being explicitly programmed. In the past decade, machine
learning has enabled the development of self-driving cars,
practical speech recognition, effective web search, and a
vastly improved understanding of the human genome. Many
researchers think it is the best way to make progress towards
human-level Artificial Intelligence. The course will draw from
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numerous case studies and applications, so participants will
learn how to apply learning algorithms to building smart robots
(perception, control), text understanding (web search, anti-
spam), computer vision, medical informatics, audio, database
mining, and more. The course will consist of lecture videos,
quizzes, and programming assignments, and will run for 10
weeks.
Find out more
Game Theory
Kevin Leyton-Brown (University of British Columbia), Matthew 0.
Jackson, and Yoav Shoham
Starting October 14th
Game theory is the mathematical modeling of strategic
interaction among rational (and irrational) agents. Beyond what
we call "games" in common language, such as chess, poker,
and soccer, game theory considers incentives and includes the
modeling of conflict among nations, political campaigns,
competition among firms, and trading behavior in markets such
as the NYSE. The course covers the basics: representing
games and strategies, the extensive form (which computer
scientists call game trees), repeated and stochastic games,
coalitional games, and Bayesian games (modeling things like
auctions). The course will consist of videos, slides, quizzes,
online lab exercises, problem sets, screen-side chats, and a
final exam. Participants must be comfortable with
mathematical thinking and rigorous arguments. The course will
last nine weeks.
Find out more
Constructive Classroom Conversations: Mastering the
Language of the Common Core State Standards
Kenji Hakuta, Jeff Zwiers, and Sara Rutherford-Quach
Starting October 21st
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This short course, ideal for educators, looks closely at student-
to-student discourse and addresses how to facilitate student
engagement in the types of interactions required by the new
Common Core State Standards for English ELA and
Mathematics. The overall goal is for participating educators to
better understand student-student classroom discourse and
use what they learn to facilitate higher quality interactions that
build disciplinary knowledge and skills.
Find out more
Automata
Jeff Ullman
Starting November 4th
This course focuses on Automata Theory, the study of
mathematical objects and the computational problems that can
be solved using them, and it is based on material taught at
Stanford in the Computer Science course CS154. The course
covers four broad areas: finite automata and regular
expressions; context-free grammars; Turing machines and
decidability; and the theory of intractability, or NP-complete
problems. Participants will have access to screencast lecture
videos, are given quiz questions, assignments and exams, will
receive regular feedback on progress, and can participate in a
discussion forum. The course will run for six weeks and
requires background in computer science and mathematics.
Find out more
Environmental Physiology: Your Body in The World
Anne Friedlander with TA Corey Dysick
Starting January 13th, 2014
Learn how the human body is an amazing machine that is
equipped to deal with the world's great stressors. This science
of physiology course is geared toward the general public and
examines the impact of extreme environments on the body,
offering practical tips on how people can mitigate some of
these effects. High-definition video takes participants along for
the ride as Dr. Friedlander and decathlete Corey Dysick climb
into the cockpit of a fighter jet, parachute from 15,000 feet, and
test their own ability to adapt to these and other extreme
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environments. The course covers key concepts and includes
compelling stories, expert interviews, and thought-provoking
lectures. This course will run for six weeks. Buckle up!
Find out more
Learn more at: online.stanford.edu
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ℹ️ Document Details
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Bates Number
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Document Type
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Pages
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