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Not willing to spend the big
bucks and time in live classes and universities? Here's a sorted list
of 10 websites offering OpenCourseWare for free education! |
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| Although online courses have
been on the Internet for many years now, quality and quantity of courses
have improved and increased manifolds over the years. Students can now
study these free courses and come at par with others who obtained the
same certification from a regular school/university. As mentioned in The
New York Times article, author Tamar Lewin states, “In the past few
months hundreds of thousands of motivated students around the world who
lack access to elite universities have been embracing them as a path
toward sophisticated skills and high-paying jobs, without paying tuition
or collecting a college degree.”
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Here's a list of 10 such websites that offers free online OpenCourseWare:
1. MIT
While
not the first university to adopt OpenCourseWare (OCW), MIT's
initiative started the movement in 2002. Many other universities
followed suit.
Still one of the best OCW programs out there, MIT
offers materials from 2,150 courses in business, engineering, math and
science. MIT also offers in-depth courses about design, music theory and
the fine arts. With video and audio lectures, interactive simulations
and online textbooks, all courses in MIT's OCW program feature
calendars, syllabi, exams and supplementary materials.
MIT has
also partnered with various other organisations for translated courses
in seven languages. You can download all the course materials in one
package.
2. OpenCourseWare Consortium
The
OpenCourseWare Consortium is a worldwide collaborative initiative that
brings together OCW from universities across six continents. Browse
courses by language or source; there's also a course catalog (currently
in beta mode) to browse classes by subject.
The Consortium also has a OCW Toolkit Initiative of resources to help institutions set up the initiatives on their own.
3. Yale
Yale's
OCW only offers 42 courses, but the streamlined, easy-to-navigate
platform provides a rich environment for learning. There's a wide
variety of humanities and sciences, from a philosophy class on death to
an economics class on financial markets.
Each course is equipped
with downloadable video lectures, notes and searchable transcripts for
each class. Skip within video lectures to a specific chapter, too. All
video classes are hosted on YouTube and iTunes. The school also offers
audio-only MP3s of each lecture perfect for learning on the go.
4. Open.Michigan
Open.Michigan,
University of Michigan's OCW initiative, features a giant collection of
courses from 19 of the university's schools, colleges and units.
Ranging from literature to dentistry to public policy, the extensive
list hosts a variety of courses -- all complete with syllabi, course
lectures and supplementary material.
There's also a useful guide
for sharing and using openly licensed content. Access all of the course
files in a categorized list; each file has links for downloads or
YouTube videos alongside Creative Commons licensing information. View
materials by session or all at once.
5. Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
John
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health offers comprehensive
materials for dozens of courses on topics like chronic diseases, global
health and injury prevention. Browse by course, topic, curated
collections or the school's library of images and graphics.
6. Harvard Medical School
Harvard
Medical School's OCW initiative includes dozens of materials from its
course catalog. It's more of a library of resources than a list of full
courses the collection includes classes with video clips, lecture
slides, notes and projects. Others offer "simulations," via an app, of
surgeries and diagnoses.
7. Carnegie Mellon
Carnegie
Mellon only has a handful of courses, mostly in the STEM fields.
However, the courses are comprehensive and the layout is conducive to a
streamlined learning experience. Though there aren't any video lectures,
the classes are laid out like online courses. All notes are completely
digital, and there are interactive practice problems for students to
self-check their understanding of each lesson.
You need to
register for an account to save your work, but if you just want to take
the course without saving anything, just don't register. All courses
have useful diagrams and illustrations. The lessons are formatted in a
linear flow, too so it's chapter-by-chapter, not slide-by-slide Skip
ahead to whichever chapter or lesson you choose.
8. Tufts University
Browse
classes from eight schools at Tufts University's OCW initiative. Choose
from schools of dentistry, medicine, nutrition policy, veterinary
medicine, arts and sciences, engineering and international relations.
There are a handful of courses within each school.
Each course
contains a variety of materials: PDFs of lecture slides, homework
assignments and exams. While the navigation isn't the most streamlined,
and not all courses contain complete materials, the courses are rich
with searchable text and detailed lessons.
Additionally, Tufts offers a guide to Open Education Resources for even more useful links and libraries for teachers.
9. Notre Dame
Notre
Dame's OCW program offers courses across two dozen of its departments,
from aerospace engineering and classics to mathematics and theology.
Each course includes a syllabus; others have class structure outlines.
Classes also include professor biographies so you know you're learning
from an accredited source.
Audio lectures, PowerPoint slides,
illustrations and texts are all free to use. Courses have a range of
categories, like exams and solutions, lecture slides and sample final
projects.
10. UC Berkeley
UC
Berkeley webcasts offers a large selection of courses in a
comprehensive list of departments including bioengineering, Japanese,
legal studies, public health. Since the webcasts are more or less
recordings of actual lectures, as opposed to courses optimized for web,
they lack lecture notes and supplementary materials.
However, each course has audio recordings of lectures via iTunes or video recordings of lectures via YouTube.
courtesy: mashable |
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