List of free and publicly available university video courses
From EverybodyWiki Bios & Wiki
This is a list of university courses available in the form of free and publicly accessible online video lectures.
Listed are only courses that are:
- Available completely free of charge
- No registration is required to access the lectures
- Which are full university courses (i.e. not tutorials and similar forms of shorter lectures/instructions)
Biology[edit]
Name | Institution | Lecturer | Language | Year | Num. of lectures |
Total duration |
Code | Course description | URL 1 | URL 2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Human Behavioral Biology | Stanford University | Robert Sapolsky | English | 2010. | 25 | 37h | BIO 150 | This course focuses on how to approach complex normal and abnormal behaviors through biology and how to integrate disciplines including sociobiology, ethology, neuroscience, and endocrinology to examine behaviors such as aggression, sexual behavior, language use, and mental illness. | Youtube list | Web page |
Introductory Biology | MIT | Barbara Imperiali, Adam Martin, Diviya Ray | English | 2018. | 35 | 28h | 7.016 | Introductory Biology provides an introduction to fundamental principles of biochemistry, molecular biology and genetics for understanding the functions of living systems. Taught for the first time in Fall 2013, this course covers examples of the use of chemical biology and twenty-first-century molecular genetics in understanding human health and therapeutic intervention. | Youtube list | Web page |
Fundamentals of Biology | MIT | Eric Lander | English | 2011. | 39 | 12h | 7.01SC | Fundamentals of Biology focuses on the basic principles of biochemistry, molecular biology, genetics, and recombinant DNA. These principles are necessary to understanding the basic mechanisms of life and anchor the biological knowledge that is required to understand many of the challenges in everyday life, from human health and disease to loss of biodiversity and environmental quality. | Youtube list | Web page |
Virology | Columbia University | Vincent Racaniello | English | 2021. | 25 | 29h | Biology 4310 | The course will emphasize the common reactions that must be completed by all viruses for successful reproduction within a host cell and survival and spread within a host population. The molecular basis of alternative reproductive cycles, the interactions of viruses with host organisms, and how these lead to disease are presented with examples drawn from a set of representative animal and human viruses, although selected bacterial viruses will be discussed. | Youtube list | Web page |
Virology | Columbia University | Vincent Racaniello | English | 2011. | 26 | 30h | Biology W3310 | The course will emphasize the common reactions that must be completed by all viruses for successful reproduction within a host cell and survival and spread within a host population. The molecular basis of alternative reproductive cycles, the interactions of viruses with host organisms, and how these lead to disease are presented with examples drawn from a set of representative animal and human viruses, although selected bacterial viruses will be discussed. | Youtube list | |
Principles of Evolution, Ecology and Behavior | Yale University | Stephen C. Stearns | English | 2009. | 36 | 27h | EEB 122 | This course presents the principles of evolution, ecology, and behavior for students beginning their study of biology and of the environment. It discusses major ideas and results in a manner accessible to all Yale College undergraduates. Recent advances have energized these fields with results that have implications well beyond their boundaries: ideas, mechanisms, and processes that should form part of the toolkit of all biologists and educated citizens. | Youtube list | Web page |
Frontiers of Biomedical Engineering | Yale University | W. Mark Saltzman | English | 2008. | 25 | 20h | BENG 100 | The course covers basic concepts of biomedical engineering and their connection with the spectrum of human activity. It serves as an introduction to the fundamental science and engineering on which biomedical engineering is based. Case studies of drugs and medical products illustrate the product development-product testing cycle, patent protection, and FDA approval. It is designed for science and non-science majors. | Youtube list | Web page |
Chemistry[edit]
Name | Institution | Lecturer | Language | Year | Num. of lectures |
Total duration |
Code | Course description | URL 1 | URL 2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Principles of Chemical Science | MIT | Catherine Drennan, Elizabeth Vogel Taylor | English | 2008. | 36 | 27h | 5.111 | This course provides an introduction to the chemistry of biological, inorganic, and organic molecules. The emphasis is on basic principles of atomic and molecular electronic structure, thermodynamics, acid-base and redox equilibria, chemical kinetics, and catalysis. | Youtube list | Web page |
Freshman Organic Chemistry I | Yale University | J. Michael McBride | English | 2008. | 37 | 30h | CHEM 125a | This is the first semester in a two-semester introductory course focused on current theories of structure and mechanism in organic chemistry, their historical development, and their basis in experimental observation. The course is open to freshmen with excellent preparation in chemistry and physics, and it aims to develop both taste for original science and intellectual skills necessary for creative research. | Youtube list | Web page |
Freshman Organic Chemistry II | Yale University | J. Michael McBride | English | 2011. | 38 | 31h | CHEM 125b | This is a continuation of Freshman Organic Chemistry I (CHEM 125a), the introductory course on current theories of structure and mechanism in organic chemistry for students with excellent preparation in chemistry and physics. This semester treats simple and complex reaction mechanisms, spectroscopy, organic synthesis, and some molecules of nature. | Youtube list | Web page |
Small-Molecule Spectroscopy and Dynamics | MIT | Robert Field | English | 2008. | 38 | 34h | 5.80 | The goal of this course is to illustrate the spectroscopy of small molecules in the gas phase: quantum mechanical effective Hamiltonian models for rotational, vibrational, and electronic structure; transition selection rules and relative intensities; diagnostic patterns and experimental methods for the assignment of non-textbook spectra; breakdown of the Born-Oppenheimer approximation (spectroscopic perturbations); the stationary phase approximation; nondegenerate and quasidegenerate perturbation theory (van Vleck transformation); qualitative molecular orbital theory (Walsh diagrams); the notation of atomic and molecular spectroscopy. | Youtube list | Web page |
Introduction to Solid State Chemistry | MIT | Donald Sadoway | English | 2010. | 61 | 35h | 3.091SC | Introduction to Solid State Chemistry is a first-year single-semester college course on the principles of chemistry. This unique and popular course satisfies MIT's general chemistry degree requirement, with an emphasis on solid-state materials and their application to engineering systems. | Youtube list | Web page |
Thermodynamics & Kinetics in Chemistry | MIT | Keith A. Nelson, Moungi Bawendi | English | 2008. | 36 | 30h | 5.60 | This subject deals primarily with equilibrium properties of macroscopic systems, basic thermodynamics, chemical equilibrium of reactions in gas and solution phase, and rates of chemical reactions. | Youtube list | Web page |
Computer science[edit]
Name | Institution | Lecturer | Language | Year | Num. of lectures |
Total duration |
Code | Course description | URL 1 | URL 2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Introduction to Computer Science I | Harvard University | David J. Malan | English | 2020. | 13 | 27h | CS50 | CS50 is Harvard University's introduction to the intellectual enterprises of computer science and the art of programming. | Youtube list | Web page |
Programming for Designers | UNSW Sydney | Malcom Ryan, Claude Sammut | English | 2011. | 18 | 15h | COMP1400-T2 | An introduction to the concepts and techniques of object oriented programming with a focus on the construction of interactive multimedia applications. Delivery is through lectures and computer lab classes. Assessment will be via a number of in-class exercises and staged assignments. | Youtube list | Web page |
Introduction to Algorithms | MIT | Erik Demaine, Srini Devadas | English | 2011. | 47 | 42h | 6.006 | This course provides an introduction to mathematical modeling of computational problems. It covers the common algorithms, algorithmic paradigms, and data structures used to solve these problems. The course emphasizes the relationship between algorithms and programming, and introduces basic performance measures and analysis techniques for these problems. | Youtube list | Web page |
Digital Design and Computer Architecture | ETH Zürich | Onur Mutlu | English | 2020. | 38 | 44h | The class provides a first introduction to the design of digital circuits and computer architecture. It covers technical foundations of how a computing platform is designed from the bottom up. It introduces various execution paradigms, hardware description languages, and principles in digital design and computer architecture. The focus is on fundamental techniques employed in the design of modern microprocessors and their hardware/software interface. | Youtube list | Web page | |
Performance Engineering of Software Systems | MIT | Charles Leiserson, Julian Shun | English | 2018. | 23 | 30h | 6.172 | 6.172 provides a hands-on, project-based introduction to building scalable and high-performance software systems. Topics include performance analysis, algorithmic techniques for high performance, instruction-level optimizations, caching optimizations, parallel programming, and building scalable systems. The course programming language is C. | Youtube list | Web page |
Performance Engineering of Software Systems | MIT | Saman Amarasinghe, Charles Leiserson | English | 2010. | 24 | 29h | 6.172 | This class is a hands-on, project-based introduction to building scalable and high-performance software systems. Topics include performance analysis, algorithmic techniques for high performance, instruction-level optimizations, cache and memory hierarchy optimization, parallel programming, and building scalable distributed systems. | Youtube list | Web page |
Programming Methodology | Stanford University | Mehran Sahami | English | 2007. | 28 | 22h | CS106A | An introduction to the engineering of computer applications emphasizing modern software engineering principles: object-oriented design, decomposition, encapsulation, abstraction, and testing. Uses the Java programming language. Emphasis is on good programming style and the built-in facilities of the Java language. . The course is explicitly designed to appeal to humanists and social scientists as well as hard-core techies. In fact, most Programming Methodology graduates end up majoring outside of the School of Engineering. | Youtube list | Web page |
Programming Abstractions | Stanford University | Julie Zelenski | English | 2008. | 27 | 21h | CS106B | This course (CS 106B) is the successor to CS 106A and covers more advanced programming topics such as recursion, algorithmic analysis, and data abstraction. It is taught using the C++ programming language, which is similar to both C and Java. In the past when both CS 106A and CS106B were taught in C/C++, the coupling between the two classes was very tight and it was unheard for students to take CS106B without having completed our CS 106A (we recommended CS 106X instead). Nowadays, some students do go straight into CS106B, this is typically appropriate for a student who done well in an intro programming course and has sufficient familiarity with good programming style and software engineering issues (at the level of CS 106A) to use this understanding as a foundation on which to tackle advanced topics. Topics: Abstraction and its relation to programming. Software engineering principles of data abstraction and modularity. Object-oriented programming, fundamental data structures (such as stacks, queues, sets) and data-directed design. Recursion and recursive data structures (linked lists, trees, graphs). Introduction to time and space complexity analysis. | Youtube list | Web page |
Programming Paradigms | Stanford University | Jerry Cain | English | 2008. | 27 | 22h | CS107 | Programming Paradigms (CS107) introduces several programming languages, including C, Assembly, C++, Concurrent Programming, Scheme, and Python. The class aims to teach students how to write code for each of these individual languages and to understand the programming paradigms behind these languages. Advanced memory management features of C and C++; the differences between imperative and object-oriented paradigms. The functional paradigm (using LISP) and concurrent programming (using C and C++). Brief survey of other modern languages such as Python, Objective C, and C#. Prerequisites: You should be comfortable with arrays, pointers, references, classes, methods, dynamic memory allocation, recursion, linked lists, binary search trees, hashing, iterators, and function pointers. You should be able to write well-decomposed, easy-to-understand code, and understand the value that comes with good variable names, short function and method implementations, and thoughtful, articulate comments. | Youtube list | Web page |
Introduction to operating systems | University at Buffalo | Geoffrey Challen | English | 2017. | 37 | 28h | CSE 421/521 | This course is an introduction to operating system design and implementation. We study operating systems because they are examples of mature and elegant solutions to a difficult design problem: how to safely and efficiently share system resources and provide abstractions useful to applications. | Youtube list | Web page |
Parallel Computer Architecture | Carnegie Mellon University | Onur Mutlu | English | 2012. | 24 | 35h | 18-742 | Youtube list | Web page | |
Introduction to Machine Learning | University of Toronto | Amir H. Ashouri | English | 2019. | 38 | 28h | ECE421/ECE1513 | An Introduction to the basic theory, the fundamental algorithms, and the computational toolboxes of machine learning. | Youtube list | Web page |
Machine Learning | Stanford University | Andrew Ng | English | 2018. | 20 | 27h | CS229 | This course provides a broad introduction to machine learning and statistical pattern recognition. Topics include: supervised learning (generative/discriminative learning, parametric/non-parametric learning, neural networks, support vector machines); unsupervised learning (clustering, dimensionality reduction, kernel methods); learning theory (bias/variance tradeoffs, practical advice); reinforcement learning and adaptive control. The course will also discuss recent applications of machine learning, such as to robotic control, data mining, autonomous navigation, bioinformatics, speech recognition, and text and web data processing. | Youtube list | Web page |
Machine Learning | Stanford University | Andrew Ng | English | 2008.? | 20 | 25h | CS229 | This course provides a broad introduction to machine learning and statistical pattern recognition. Topics include: supervised learning (generative/discriminative learning, parametric/non-parametric learning, neural networks, support vector machines); unsupervised learning (clustering, dimensionality reduction, kernel methods); learning theory (bias/variance tradeoffs; VC theory; large margins); reinforcement learning and adaptive control. The course will also discuss recent applications of machine learning, such as to robotic control, data mining, autonomous navigation, bioinformatics, speech recognition, and text and web data processing. | Youtube list | Web page |
Introduction to Deep Learning | MIT | Alexander Amini | English | 2021. | 43 | 29h | 6.S191 | MIT's introductory course on deep learning methods with applications to computer vision, natural language processing, biology, and more! Students will gain foundational knowledge of deep learning algorithms and get practical experience in building neural networks in TensorFlow. Course concludes with a project proposal competition with feedback from staff and panel of industry sponsors. Prerequisites assume calculus (i.e. taking derivatives) and linear algebra (i.e. matrix multiplication), we'll try to explain everything else along the way! Experience in Python is helpful but not necessary. This class is taught during MIT's IAP term by current MIT PhD researchers. | Youtube list | Web page |
Intro to Game Programming (C++) | Memorial University of Newfoundland | David Churchill | English | 2022. | 22 | 29h | COMP 4300 | This is an introductory course for students interested in learning the fundamentals of game programming. Topics include vector math for games, fundamentals of rendering, introduction to animation and artificial intelligence, collision detection, game physics and user-interfaces. | Youtube list | Web page |
AI for Video Games | Memorial University of Newfoundland | David Churchill | English | 2022. | 22 | 20h | COMP 4303 | This course provides an introduction to specific state-of-the-art algorithmic techniques and data structures that are used to efficiently implement humanlike abilities (e.g., awareness, memory, rational decision-making (under uncertainty), movement, co-operation in groups) in computer game agents. | Youtube list | Web page |
Economy[edit]
Name | Institution | Lecturer | Language | Year | Num. of lectures |
Total duration |
Code | Course description | URL 1 | URL 2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Challenge of World Poverty | MIT | Esther Duflo, Abhijit Banerjee | English | 2011. | 22 | 25h | 14.73 | This is a course for those who are interested in the challenge posed by massive and persistent world poverty, and are hopeful that economists might have something useful to say about this challenge. | Youtube list | Web page |
Principles of Microeconomics | MIT | Jonathan Gruber | English | 2018. | 26 | 21h | 14.01 | This introductory undergraduate course covers the fundamentals of microeconomics. Topics include supply and demand, market equilibrium, consumer theory, production and the behavior of firms, monopoly, oligopoly, welfare economics, public goods, and externalities. | Youtube list | Web page |
Financial Theory | Yale University | John Geanakoplos | English | 2009. | 26 | 26h | ECON 251 | This course attempts to explain the role and the importance of the financial system in the global economy. Rather than separating off the financial world from the rest of the economy, financial equilibrium is studied as an extension of economic equilibrium. The course also gives a picture of the kind of thinking and analysis done by hedge funds. | Youtube list | Web page |
Finance Theory I | MIT | Andrew Lo | English | 2008. | 20 | 25h | 15.401 | This course provides a rigorous introduction to the fundamentals of modern financial analysis and applications to business challenges in valuation, risk analysis, corporate investment decisions, and basic security analysis and investment management. The four major sections of the course are: (A) an introduction to the financial system, the financial challenges firms and households face, and the principles of modern finance in tackling these challenges; (B) valuation of stocks, bonds, forwards, futures, and options; (C) methods for incorporating risk analysis into valuation models, including portfolio theory, mean-variance optimization, and the Capital Asset Pricing Model; and (D) applications to corporate financial decisions, including capital budgeting and real options. | Youtube list | Web page |
Financial Markets | Yale University | Robert Shiller | English | 2011. | 23 | 28h | ECON 252 | An overview of the ideas, methods, and institutions that permit human society to manage risks and foster enterprise. Description of practices today and analysis of prospects for the future. Introduction to risk management and behavioral finance principles to understand the functioning of securities, insurance, and banking industries. | Youtube list | Web page |
Game Theory | Yale University | Ben Polak | English | 2007. | 24 | 29h | ECON 159 | This course is an introduction to game theory and strategic thinking. Ideas such as dominance, backward induction, Nash equilibrium, evolutionary stability, commitment, credibility, asymmetric information, adverse selection, and signaling are discussed and applied to games played in class and to examples drawn from economics, politics, the movies, and elsewhere. | Youtube list | Web page |
Public Economics and Finance | New York University | Nirupama Rao | English | 13 | 21h | Public finance (also known as public economics) analyzes the impact of public policy on the allocation of resources and the distribution of income in the economy. In this course, you will learn how to use the tools of microeconomics and empirical analysis to analyze the economic effects of public expenditures and taxation. | Youtube list | Web page | ||
Special Topics in Supply Chain Management | MIT | Brian Subirana, John Williams, Sanjay Sarma | English | 2005. | 16 | 12h | ESD.290 | This subject presents a range of advanced topics in integrated logistics and supply chain management. The course was conducted in a lecture-discussion format, with participation of corporate executives as guest lecturers. Students prepare industry assessment analyses and make formal classroom presentations. Specific topics alternate from year to year, but basic content includes procurement strategies and strategic sourcing, dynamic pricing and revenue management tactics, mitigation of supply chain risk through supply contracts, strategic outsourcing of supply chain functions and operations, management and operation of third party logistics providers, and management of supply chain security. | Youtube list | Web page |
Introduction to Lean Six Sigma Methods | MIT | Earll Murman, Annalisa Weigel, Al Haggerty, High McManus | English | 2008. | 14 | 9h | 16.660 | This course introduces the fundamental Lean Six Sigma principles that underlay modern continuous improvement approaches for industry, government and other organizations. Lean emerged from the Japanese automotive industry, particularly Toyota, and is focused on the creation of value through the relentless elimination of waste. Six Sigma is a quality system developed at Motorola which focuses on elimination of variation from all processes. The basic principles have been applied to a wide range of organizations and sectors to improve quality, productivity, customer satisfaction, employee satisfaction, time-to-market and financial performance. | Youtube list | Web page |
Electrical engineering[edit]
Name | Institution | Lecturer | Language | Year | Num. of lectures |
Total duration |
Code | Course description | URL 1 | URL 2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Circuits and Electronics | MIT | Anant Agarwal | English | 2007. | 26 | 21h | 6.002 | 6.002 is designed to serve as a first course in an undergraduate electrical engineering (EE), or electrical engineering and computer science (EECS) curriculum | Youtube list | Web page |
Digital Circuit Design | UNSW Sydney | Nonie Politi | English | 2011. | 32 | 23h | ELEC2141 | Introduction to modern digital logic design, combinational logic, switch logic and basic gates, Boolean algebra, two-level logic, regular logic structures, multi-level networks and transformations, programmable logic devices, time response. Sequential logic, networks with feedback, basic latches and flip-flops, timing methodologies, registers and counters, programmable logic devices. Finite state machine design, concepts of FSMs, basic design approach, specification methods, state minimization, state encoding, FSM partitioning, implementation of FSMs, programmable logic devices. Elements of computers, arithmetic circuits, arithmetic and logic units, register and bus structures, controllers/ sequencers, microprogramming. Experience with computer-aided design tools for logic design, schematic entry, state diagram entry, hardware description language entry, compilation to logic networks, simulation, mapping to programmable logic devices. Practical topics, non-gate logic, asynchronous inputs and metastability, memories: RAM and ROM, Implementation technologies and mapping problems expressed in words to digital abstractions. | Youtube list | Web page |
AVR microcontroller lectures | Cornell University | Bruce Land | English | 2012. | 34 | 29h | ECE 4760 | MIcrocontroller design course. ECE 4760 deals with microcontrollers as components in electronic design and embedded control. | Youtube list | Web page |
Signals and Systems | MIT | Dennis Freeman | English | 2011. | 25 | 20h | 6.003 | The analysis of signals and systems forms a key part of many modern technologies, including communications and feedback & control. These lectures give a conceptual and mathematical introduction to the topic, covering both analog and digital systems. | Youtube list | Web page |
Electronic Feedback Systems | MIT | James Roberge | English | 1985. | 20 | 17h | Feedback control is an important technique that is used in many modern electronic and electromechanical systems. The successful inclusion of this technique improves performance, reliability, and cost effectiveness of many designs. In this series of lectures we introduce the analytical concepts that underlie classical feedback system design. The application of these concepts is illustrated by a variety of experiments and demonstration systems. The diversity of the demonstration systems reinforces the value of the analytic methods. | Youtube list | Web page | |
Biomedical Electronics | Cornell University | Bruce Land | English | 2013. | 21 | 24h | ECE5030 | Covers the theory and practical aspects of recording and analyzing electronic data collected from biological systems. Topics may include electrode and amplifier design, tissue impedance and effects on waveforms, sensors, statistical and signal processing algorithms, noise reduction, and safety considerations. | Youtube list | Web page |
History[edit]
Name | Institution | Lecturer | Language | Year | Num. of lectures |
Total duration |
Code | Course description | URL 1 | URL 2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Introduction to Ancient Greek History | Yale University | Donald Kagan | English | 2007. | 24 | 28h | CLCV 205 | This is an introductory course in Greek history tracing the development of Greek civilization as manifested in political, intellectual, and creative achievements from the Bronze Age to the end of the classical period. Students read original sources in translation as well as the works of modern scholars. | Youtube list | Web page |
Roman Architecture | Yale University | Diana E. E. Kleiner | English | 2009. | 24 | 28h | HSAR 252 | This course is an introduction to the great buildings and engineering marvels of Rome and its empire, with an emphasis on urban planning and individual monuments and their decoration, including mural painting. While architectural developments in Rome, Pompeii, and Central Italy are highlighted, the course also provides a survey of sites and structures in what are now North Italy, Sicily, France, Spain, Germany, Greece, Turkey, Croatia, Jordan, Lebanon, Libya, and North Africa. The lectures are illustrated with over 1,500 images, many from Professor Kleiner's personal collection. | Youtube list | Web page |
The Early Middle Ages, 284–1000 | Yale University | Paul Freedman | English | 2011. | 22 | 17h | HIST 210 | Major developments in the political, social, and religious history of Western Europe from the accession of Diocletian to the feudal transformation. Topics include the conversion of Europe to Christianity, the fall of the Roman Empire, the rise of Islam and the Arabs, the "Dark Ages," Charlemagne and the Carolingian renaissance, and the Viking and Hungarian invasions. | Youtube list | Web page |
Early Modern England: Politics, Religion, and Society under the Tudors and Stuarts | Yale University | Keith E. Wrightson | English | 2009. | 25 | 19h | HIST 251 | This course is intended to provide an up-to-date introduction to the development of English society between the late fifteenth and the early eighteenth centuries. Particular issues addressed in the lectures will include: the changing social structure; households; local communities; gender roles; economic development; urbanization; religious change from the Reformation to the Act of Toleration; the Tudor and Stuart monarchies; rebellion, popular protest and civil war; witchcraft; education, literacy and print culture; crime and the law; poverty and social welfare; the changing structures and dynamics of political participation and the emergence of parliamentary government. | Youtube list | Web page |
European Civilization, 1648-1945 | Yale University | John Merriman | English | 2008. | 24 | 18h | HIST 202 | This course offers a broad survey of modern European history, from the end of the Thirty Years' War to the aftermath of World War II. Along with the consideration of major events and figures such as the French Revolution and Napoleon, attention will be paid to the experience of ordinary people in times of upheaval and transition. The period will thus be viewed neither in terms of historical inevitability nor as a procession of great men, but rather through the lens of the complex interrelations between demographic change, political revolution, and cultural development. Textbook accounts will be accompanied by the study of exemplary works of art, literature, and cinema. | Youtube list | Web page |
Epidemics in Western Society Since 1600 | Yale University | Frank Snowden | English | 2010. | 26 | 20h | HIST 234 | This course consists of an international analysis of the impact of epidemic diseases on western society and culture from the bubonic plague to HIV/AIDS and the recent experience of SARS and swine flu. Leading themes include: infectious disease and its impact on society; the development of public health measures; the role of medical ethics; the genre of plague literature; the social reactions of mass hysteria and violence; the rise of the germ theory of disease; the development of tropical medicine; a comparison of the social, cultural, and historical impact of major infectious diseases; and the issue of emerging and re-emerging diseases. | Youtube list | Web page |
The American Revolution | Yale University | Joanne Freeman | English | 2010. | 25 | 18h | HIST 116 | The American Revolution entailed some remarkable transformations—converting British colonists into American revolutionaries, and a cluster of colonies into a confederation of states with a common cause—but it was far more complex and enduring then the fighting of a war. As John Adams put it, "The Revolution was in the Minds of the people... before a drop of blood was drawn at Lexington"—and it continued long past America's victory at Yorktown. This course will examine the Revolution from this broad perspective, tracing the participants' shifting sense of themselves as British subjects, colonial settlers, revolutionaries, and Americans. | Youtube list | Web page |
The Civil War and Reconstruction Era, 1845-1877 | Yale University | David W. Blight | English | 2008. | 27 | 22h | HIST 119 | This course explores the causes, course, and consequences of the American Civil War, from the 1840s to 1877. The primary goal of the course is to understand the multiple meanings of a transforming event in American history. Those meanings may be defined in many ways: national, sectional, racial, constitutional, individual, social, intellectual, or moral. Four broad themes are closely examined: the crisis of union and disunion in an expanding republic; slavery, race, and emancipation as national problem, personal experience, and social process; the experience of modern, total war for individuals and society; and the political and social challenges of Reconstruction. | Youtube list | Web page |
France Since 1871 | Yale University | John Merriman | English | 2007. | 24 | 18h | HIST 276 | This course covers the emergence of modern France. Topics include the social, economic, and political transformation of France; the impact of France's revolutionary heritage, of industrialization, and of the dislocation wrought by two world wars; and the political response of the Left and the Right to changing French society. | Youtube list | Web page |
African American History: From Emancipation to the Present | Yale University | Jonathan Holloway | English | 2010. | 25 | 20h | AFAM 162 | The purpose of this course is to examine the African American experience in the United States from 1863 to the present. Prominent themes include the end of the Civil War and the beginning of Reconstruction; African Americans’ urbanization experiences; the development of the modern civil rights movement and its aftermath; and the thought and leadership of Booker T. Washington, Ida B. Wells-Barnett, W.E.B. Du Bois, Marcus Garvey, Martin Luther King Jr., and Malcolm X. | Video | Web page |
New York City: A Social History | New York University | Daniel Walkowitz | English | 2010. | 26 | 29h | New York City, growing from the small Dutch commercial settlement of New Amsterdam early in the seventeenth century into a bustling multi-cultural city of more than 7 million and metropolis of more than 15 million by the twentieth century, is a place with many stories. A semester of 14 weeks can only touch on some of them. This course will focus on the social history of the city – the peoples who have built the city and competing efforts by different numbers to authorize their dreams for the city. As arguably the capital for global capitalism today, one focus of this course will seek to plot its development and legacy for the shaping of the city. A more particular and related local story will be studied as well, however: the political and cultural interests, ideologies and players who shape and reshape the city as Manhattan, as New York and as the Metropolis. | Youtube list | ||
Ancient Israel | New York University | Daniel Fleming | English | 2010. | 27 | 29h | This course is designed to make the acquaintance from scratch. My ancient Israel is strange, sometimes shocking, diverse, and mostly hidden. It can be approached from archaeology and non-biblical writing as well as from the Bible as its most famous artifact. I am a biblical scholar and student of ancient literature, so this class will lean toward what is written, embracing the Bible as a source. In a broadly chronological framework, we will ask what I hope to be unfamiliar questions, trying to get you to see things you had not considered before. The course assumes no prior knowledge, and all knowledge is built from the ground up based on “primary evidence,” the actual material from the ancient world – including the Bible. Every full-class meeting will involve conversation in response to some piece of primary evidence, with expectation that students have as much right as any scholar to figure out who these people are for themselves. | Youtube list |
Mathematics[edit]
Name | Institution | Lecturer | Language | Year | Num. of lectures |
Total duration |
Code | Course description | URL 1 | URL 2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
College Algebra | University of Missouri–Kansas City | Richard Delaware | English | 1998. | 40 | 43h | Math 110 | College Algebra Lectures with UMKC's Professor Richard Delaware, in association with UMKC's Video Based Supplemental Instruction Program. | Youtube list | Web page |
Calculus I | University of Missouri–Kansas City | Richard Delaware | English | 2005. | 36 | 30h | Math 210 | Calculus 1/ Calc 1 with UMKC's Professor Richard Delaware, in association with UMKC's Video Based Supplemental Instruction Program | Youtube list | Web page |
Multivariable Calculus | MIT | Denis Auroux | English | 2007. | 35 | 28h | 18.02 | This course covers vector and multi-variable calculus. It is the second semester in the freshman calculus sequence. Topics include vectors and matrices, partial derivatives, double and triple integrals, and vector calculus in 2 and 3-space. | Youtube list | Web page |
Differential Equations | MIT | Arthur Mattuck, Haynes Miller, Jeremy Orloff, John Lewis | English | 2011. | 32 | 31h | 18.03SC | Differential equations are the language in which the laws of nature are expressed. Understanding properties of solutions of differential equations is fundamental to much of contemporary science and engineering. Ordinary differential equations (ODE's) deal with functions of one variable, which can often be thought of as time. | Youtube list | Web page |
Mathematical Methods for Engineers I / Computational Science & Engineering I | MIT | Gilbert Strang | English | 2008. | 50 | 42h | 18.085 | This course provides a review of linear algebra, including applications to networks, structures, and estimation, Lagrange multipliers. Also covered are: differential equations of equilibrium; Laplace's equation and potential flow; boundary-value problems; minimum principles and calculus of variations; Fourier series; discrete Fourier transform; convolution; and applications.
Note: This course was previously called "Mathematical Methods for Engineers I. |
Youtube list | Web page |
Mathematical Methods for Engineers II | MIT | Gilbert Strang | English | 2006. | 29 | 25h | 18.086 | This graduate-level course is a continuation of Mathematical Methods for Engineers I (18.085). Topics include numerical methods; initial-value problems; network flows; and optimization. | Youtube list | Web page |
Linear Finite Element Analysis | MIT | Klaus-Jürgen Bathe | English | 1982./1986. | 12 | 11h | RES.2-002 | This video series is a comprehensive course of study that presents effective finite element procedures for the linear analysis of solids and structures. The finite element method is the ideal tool for solving static and dynamic problems in engineering and the sciences. Linear analysis assumes linear elastic behavior and infinitesimally small displacements and strains. To establish appropriate models for analysis, it is necessary to become familiar with the finite element methods available. | Youtube list | Web page |
Nonlinear Finite Element Analysis | MIT | Klaus-Jürgen Bathe | English | 1982./1986. | 22 | 19h | RES.2-002 | In these videos, Professor K. J. Bathe, a researcher of world renown in the field of finite element analysis, builds upon the concepts developed in his previous video course on Linear Analysis. General nonlinear analysis techniques are presented by emphasizing physical concepts. The mathematical foundation of nonlinear finite element techniques is given in light of these physical requirements. A wide range of questions in engineering and the sciences can be addressed with these methods. Upon completion of the course, participants will be able to simulate and analyze problems such as: Large displacement collapse or buckling of structures, Progressive damage of structural components under high-temperature conditions, Stresses and strains of structures under severe earthquake loads, Accident conditions due to sudden overloads, Construction and repair of structures, Stability of underground openings | Youtube list | Web page |
Introduction to Probability and Statistics | University of California, Irvine | Michael C. Cranston | English | 2013. | 16 | 25h | 131A | Introductory course covering basic principles of probability and statistical inference. Axiomatic definition of probability, random variables, probability distributions, expectation. | Youtube list | Web page |
Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences | New York University | Elizabeth Baue | English | 23 | 24h | PSYCH-UA 10 | This applied math course provides students with the basic tools for evaluating data from studies in the behavioral sciences, particularly psychology. Students will gain familiarity with data description, variance and variability, significance tests, confident intervals, correlation and linear regression, analysis of variance, and other related topics. The goal is to learn the application of statistical reasoning to decision making. Current events are often used to illustrate these issues. | Youtube list | Web page | |
The Fourier Transforms and Its Applications | Stanford University | Brad Osgood | English | 2007. | 30 | 26h | EE 261 | The Fourier transform is a tool for solving physical problems. In this course the emphasis is on relating the theoretical principles to solving practical engineering and science problems. | Youtube list | Web page |
Pedagogy[edit]
Name | Institution | Lecturer | Language | Year | Num. of lectures |
Total duration |
Code | Course description | URL 1 | URL 2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Teaching College-Level Science and Engineering | MIT | Sanjoy Mahajan | English | 2009. | 11 | 15h | 5.95J | This participatory seminar focuses on the knowledge and skills necessary for teaching science and engineering in higher education. This course is designed for graduate students interested in an academic career, and anyone else interested in teaching. Readings and discussions include: teaching equations for understanding, designing exam and homework questions, incorporating histories of science, creating absorbing lectures, teaching for transfer, the evils of PowerPoint, and planning a course. The subject is appropriate for both novices and those with teaching experience. | Youtube list | Web page |
Philosophy[edit]
Name | Institution | Lecturer | Language | Year | Num. of lectures |
Total duration |
Code | Course description | URL 1 | URL 2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Death | Yale University | Shelly Kagan | English | 2007. | 26 | 21h | PHIL 176 | There is one thing I can be sure of: I am going to die. But what am I to make of that fact? This course will examine a number of issues that arise once we begin to reflect on our mortality. The possibility that death may not actually be the end is considered. Are we, in some sense, immortal? Would immortality be desirable? Also a clearer notion of what it is to die is examined. What does it mean to say that a person has died? What kind of fact is that? And, finally, different attitudes to death are evaluated. Is death an evil? How? Why? Is suicide morally permissible? Is it rational? How should the knowledge that I am going to die affect the way I live my life? | Youtube list | Web page |
Darwin and Design | MIT | James Paradis | English | 2010. | 21 | 19h | 21L.448J | Humans are social animals; social demands, both cooperative and competitive, structure our development, our brain and our mind. This course covers social development, social behaviour, social cognition and social neuroscience, in both human and non-human social animals. Topics include altruism, empathy, communication, theory of mind, aggression, power, groups, mating, and morality. Methods include evolutionary biology, neuroscience, cognitive science, social psychology and anthropology. | Youtube list | Web page |
Philosophy and the Science of Human Nature | Yale University | Tamar Gendler | English | 2011. | 26 | 20h | PHIL 181 | Philosophy and the Science of Human Nature pairs central texts from Western philosophical tradition (including works by Plato, Aristotle, Epictetus, Hobbes, Kant, Mill, Rawls, and Nozick) with recent findings in cognitive science and related fields. The course is structured around three intertwined sets of topics: Happiness and Flourishing; Morality and Justice; and Political Legitimacy and Social Structures. | Youtube list | Web page |
Physics[edit]
Name | Institution | Lecturer | Language | Year | Num. of lectures |
Total duration |
Code | Course description | URL 1 | URL 2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Physics for Future Presidents | UC Berkeley | Richard A. Muller | English | 2006. | 26 | 29h | PHYS 10 | Yes, the title of the colloquium is serious. Energy, global warming, terrorism and counter-terrorism, nukes, internet, satellites, remote sensing, ICBMs and ABMs, DVDs and HDTVs—economic and political issues increasingly have a strong high tech content. Misjudge the science, make a wrong decision. Yet many of our leaders never studied physics, and do not understand science and technology. Physics is the liberal arts of high tech. Is science too hard for world leaders to learn? No. Think of an analogous example: Charlemagne was only half literate. He could read but not write. Writing was a skill considered too tough even for world leaders, just as physics is today. And yet now most of the world is literate. | Youtube list | Web page |
Fundamentals of Physics | Yale University | Ramamurti Shankar | English | 2006. | 24 | 29h | PHYS 200 | This course provides a thorough introduction to the principles and methods of physics for students who have good preparation in physics and mathematics. Emphasis is placed on problem solving and quantitative reasoning. This course covers Newtonian mechanics, special relativity, gravitation, thermodynamics, and waves. | Youtube list | Web page |
Fundamentals of Physics II | Yale University | Ramamurti Shankar | English | 2010. | 25 | 30h | PHYS 201 | This is a continuation of Fundamentals of Physics, I (PHYS 200), the introductory course on the principles and methods of physics for students who have good preparation in physics and mathematics. This course covers electricity, magnetism, optics and quantum mechanics. | Youtube list | Web page |
Physics I: Classical Mechanics | MIT | Walter Lewin | English | 1999 | 40 | 30h | 8.01x | Physics I is a first-year physics course which introduces students to classical mechanics | Youtube list | Web page |
Physics II: Electricity and Magnetism | MIT | Walter Lewin | English | 2002. | 40 | 32h | 8.02x | This course is an introduction to electromagnetism and electrostatics. | Youtube list | Web page |
Physics III: Vibrations and Waves | MIT | Walter Lewin | English | 2004. | 24 | 30h | 8.03 | Vibrations and waves are everywhere. If you take any system and disturb it from a stable equilibrium, the resultant motion will be waves and vibrations. Think of a guitar string—pluck the string, and it vibrates. The sound waves generated make their way to our ears, and we hear the string's sound. Our eyes see what's happening because they receive the electromagnetic waves of the light reflected from the guitar string, so that we can recognize the beautiful sinusoidal waves on the string. In fact, without vibrations and waves, we could not recognize the universe around us at all! | Youtube list | Web page |
Quantum Physics I | MIT | Allan Adams, Matthew Evans, Barton Zwiebach | English | 2013. | 25 | 33h | 8.04 | This course covers the experimental basis of quantum physics. It introduces wave mechanics, Schrödinger's equation in a single dimension, and Schrödinger's equation in three dimensions. | Youtube list | Web page |
Quantum Physics II | MIT | Barton Zwiebach | English | 2013. | 26 | 36h | 8.05 | Together, this course and 8.06 Quantum Physics III cover quantum physics with applications drawn from modern physics. Topics covered in this course include the general formalism of quantum mechanics, harmonic oscillator, quantum mechanics in three-dimensions, angular momentum, spin, and addition of angular momentum. | Youtube list | Web page |
Quantum Mechanics | University of Oxford | James Binney | English | 2009. | 27 | 22h | In this series of physics lectures, Professor J.J. Binney explains how probabilities are obtained from quantum amplitudes, why they give rise to quantum interference, the concept of a complete set of amplitudes and how this defines a "quantum state". | Youtube list | Web page | |
Frontiers/Controversies in Astrophysics | Yale University | Charles Bailyn | English | 2007. | 24 | 19h | ASTR 160 | This course focuses on three particularly interesting areas of astronomy that are advancing very rapidly: Extra-Solar Planets, Black Holes, and Dark Energy. Particular attention is paid to current projects that promise to improve our understanding significantly over the next few years. The course explores not just what is known, but what is currently not known, and how astronomers are going about trying to find out. | Youtube list | Web page |
Political science[edit]
Name | Institution | Lecturer | Language | Year | Num. of lectures |
Total duration |
Code | Course description | URL 1 | URL 2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Introduction to Political Philosophy | Yale University | Steven B. Smith | English | 2006. | 24 | 17h | PLSC 114 | This course is intended as an introduction to political philosophy as seen through an examination of some of the major texts and thinkers of the Western political tradition. Three broad themes that are central to understanding political life are focused upon: the polis experience (Plato, Aristotle), the sovereign state (Machiavelli, Hobbes), constitutional government (Locke), and democracy (Rousseau, Tocqueville). The way in which different political philosophies have given expression to various forms of political institutions and our ways of life are examined throughout the course. | Youtube list | Web page |
The Moral Foundations of Politics | Yale University | Ian Shapiro | English | 2010. | 25 | 20h | PLSC 118 | This course explores main answers to the question "when do governments deserve our allegiance?" It starts with a survey of major political theories of the Enlightenment—Utilitarianism, Marxism, and the social contract tradition—through classical formulations, historical context, and contemporary debates relating to politics today. It then turns to the rejection of Enlightenment political thinking. Lastly, it deals with the nature of, and justifications for, democratic politics, and their relations to Enlightenment and Anti-Enlightenment political thinking. Practical implications of these arguments are covered through discussion of a variety of concrete problems. | Youtube list | Web page |
Political Science 30: Politics and Strategy | UCLA | Kathleen Bawn | English | 2008. | 19 | 21h | POL SCI 30 | Taught by UCLA's Professor Kathleen Bawn, this courses is an introduction to study of strategic interaction in political applications. Use of game theory and other formal modeling strategies to understand politics are also studied in order to gain a better understanding of politics at large. | Youtube list | |
Capitalism: Success, Crisis, and Reform | Yale University | Douglas W. Rae | English | 2009. | 23 | 18h | PLSC 270 | In this course, we will seek to interpret capitalism using ideas from biological evolution: firms pursuing varied strategies and facing extinction when those strategies fail are analogous to organisms struggling for survival in nature. For this reason, it is less concerned with ultimate judgment of capitalism than with the ways it can be shaped to fit our more specific objectives–for the natural environment, public health, alleviation of poverty, and development of human potential in every child. Each book we read will be explicitly or implicitly an argument about good and bad consequences of capitalism. | Youtube list | Web page |
Environmental Politics and Law | Yale University | John Wargo | English | 2010. | 24 | 19h | EVST 255 | Can law change human behavior to be less environmentally damaging? Law will be examined through case histories including: environmental effects of national security, pesticides, air pollution, consumer products, plastics, parks and protected area management, land use, urban growth and sprawl, public/private transit, drinking water standards, food safety, and hazardous site restoration. In each case we will review the structure of law and evaluate its strengths and weaknesses. | Youtube list | Web page |
Psychology[edit]
Name | Institution | Lecturer | Language | Year | Num. of lectures |
Total duration |
Code | Course description | URL 1 | URL 2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Introduction to Psychology | MIT | John Gabrieli | English | 2011. | 24 | 23h | 9.00SC | Introduction to Psychology is a survey of the scientific study of human nature, including how the mind works, and how the brain supports the mind. Topics include the mental and neural bases of perception, emotion, learning, memory, cognition, child development, personality, psychopathology, and social interaction. | Youtube list | |
Introduction to Psychology | Yale University | Paul Bloom | English | 2007. | 20 | 18h | PSYC 110 | What do your dreams mean? Do men and women differ in the nature and intensity of their sexual desires? Can apes learn sign language? Why cant we tickle ourselves? This course tries to answer these questions and many others, providing a comprehensive overview of the scientific study of thought and behavior. It explores topics such as perception, communication, learning, memory, decision-making, religion, persuasion, love, lust, hunger, art, fiction, and dreams. We will look at how these aspects of the mind develop in children, how they differ across people, how they are wired-up in the brain, and how they break down due to illness and injury. | Youtube list | Web page |
Reflective Practice: An Approach for Expanding Your Learning Frontiers | MIT | Ceasar McDowell, Claudia Canepa, Sebastiao Ferriera | English | 2007. | 10 | 24h | The course is an introduction to the approach of Reflective Practice developed by Donald Schön. It is an approach that enables professionals to understand how they use their knowledge in practical situations and how they can combine practice and learning in a more effective way. Through greater awareness of how they deploy their knowledge in practical situations, professionals can increase their capacities of learning in a more timely way. Understanding how they frame situations and ideas helps professionals to achieve greater flexibility and increase their capacity of conceptual innovation. | Youtube list | Web page | |
Families and Couples: Psychology | UCLA | Benjamin Karney | English | 2009. | 18 | 20h | M176 | Professor Benjamin Karney lectures on families and couples. This course examines relationships and their connection to individual psychopathology, marital discord, and family disruption. | Youtube list | |
The Psychology, Biology and Politics of Food | Yale University | Kelly D. Brownell | English | 2008. | 20 | 20h | PSYC 123 | This course encompasses the study of eating as it affects the health and well-being of every human. Topics include taste preferences, food aversions, the regulation of hunger and satiety, food as comfort and friendship, eating as social ritual, and social norms of blame for food problems. The politics of food discusses issues such as sustainable agriculture, organic farming, genetically modified foods, nutrition policy, and the influence of food and agriculture industries. Also examined are problems such as malnutrition, eating disorders, and the global obesity epidemic; the impact of food advertising aimed at children; poverty and food; and how each individual's eating is affected by the modern environment. | Video | Web page |
Unsorted[edit]
Name | Institution | Lecturer | Language | Year | Num. of lectures |
Total duration |
Code | Course description | URL 1 | URL 2 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Poverty Action Lab Executive Training: Evaluating Social Programs | MIT | Rachel Glennerster, Abhijit Banerjee, Esther Duflo | English | 2009. | 8 | 12h | RES.14-001 | This five-day program on evaluating social programs will provide a thorough understanding of randomized evaluations and pragmatic step-by-step training for conducting one's own evaluation. While the course focuses on randomized evaluations, many of the topics, such as measuring outcomes and dealing with threats to the validity of an evaluation, are relevant for other methodologies. | Youtube list | Web page |
Global Problems of Population Growth | Yale University | Robert Wyman | English | 2009. | 24 | 27h | MCDB 150 | This survey course introduces students to the important and basic material on human fertility, population growth, the demographic transition and population policy. Topics include: the human and environmental dimensions of population pressure, demographic history, economic and cultural causes of demographic change, environmental carrying capacity and sustainability. Political, religious and ethical issues surrounding fertility are also addressed. The lectures and readings attempt to balance theoretical and demographic scale analyzes with studies of individual humans and communities. The perspective is global with both developed and developing countries included. | Youtube list | Web page |
Foundations of Modern Social Theory | Yale University | Iván Szelényi | English | 2009. | 25 | 20h | SOCY 151 | This course provides an overview of major works of social thought from the beginning of the modern era through the 1920s. Attention is paid to social and intellectual contexts, conceptual frameworks and methods, and contributions to contemporary social analysis. Writers include Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Montesquieu, Adam Smith, Marx, Weber, and Durkheim. | Youtube list | Web page |
Aircraft Systems Engineering (study of Space Shuttle) | MIT | Jeffrey Hoffman | English | 2005. | 23 | 40h | 16.885J / ESD.35J | 16.885J offers a holistic view of the aircraft as a system, covering: basic systems engineering; cost and weight estimation; basic aircraft performance; safety and reliability; lifecycle topics; aircraft subsystems; risk analysis and management; and system realization. Small student teams retrospectively analyze an existing aircraft covering: key design drivers and decisions; aircraft attributes and subsystems; and operational experience. Oral and written versions of the case study are delivered. For the Fall 2005 term, the class focuses on a systems engineering analysis of the Space Shuttle. It offers study of both design and operations of the shuttle, with frequent lectures by outside experts. Students choose specific shuttle systems for detailed analysis and develop new subsystem designs using state of the art technology. | Youtube list | Web page |
Control of Manufacturing Processes | MIT | David Hardt, Duane Boning | English | 2008. | 22 | 30h | 2.830J / 6.780J / ESD.63J | This course explores statistical modeling and control in manufacturing processes. Topics include the use of experimental design and response surface modeling to understand manufacturing process physics, as well as defect and parametric yield modeling and optimization. Various forms of process control, including statistical process control, run by run and adaptive control, and real-time feedback control, are covered. Application contexts include semiconductor manufacturing, conventional metal and polymer processing, and emerging micro-nano manufacturing processes. | Youtube list | Web page |
Atomistic Computer Modeling of Materials | MIT | Gerbrand Ceder, Nicola Marzari | English | 2005. | 19 | 25h | 3.320 | This course uses the theory and application of atomistic computer simulations to model, understand, and predict the properties of real materials. Specific topics include: energy models from classical potentials to first-principles approaches; density functional theory and the total-energy pseudopotential method; errors and accuracy of quantitative predictions: thermodynamic ensembles, Monte Carlo sampling and molecular dynamics simulations; free energy and phase transitions; fluctuations and transport properties; and coarse-graining approaches and mesoscale models. The course employs case studies from industrial applications of advanced materials to nanotechnology. Several laboratories will give students direct experience with simulations of classical force fields, electronic-structure approaches, molecular dynamics, and Monte Carlo. | Youtube list | Web page |
Health Information Systems | MIT | Leo Celi, Hamish Fraser, Peter Szolovits, Ken Paik | English | 2012. | 12 | 12h | HST.S14 | The goal of this course is the development of innovations in information systems for developing countries that will (1) translate into improvement in health outcomes, (2) strengthen the existing organizational infrastructure, and (3) create a collaborative ecosystem to maximize the value of these innovations. The course will be taught by guest speakers who are internationally recognized experts in the field and who, with their operational experiences, will outline the challenges they faced and detail how these were addressed. | Youtube list | Web page |
Nuclear Systems Design Project | MIT | Michael Short | English | 2011. | 10 | 8h | 22.033 / 22.33 | In this capstone design project course, students design a nuclear reactor that generates electricity, hydrogen and biofuels. Lectures introduce each major subsystem and explore design methods, and are followed by mid-term and final student presentations. | Youtube list | Web page |
Nuclear Reactor Safety | MIT | Andrew Kadak | English | 2008. | 6 | 7h | 22.091 / 22.903 | Problems in nuclear engineering often involve applying knowledge from many disciplines simultaneously in achieving satisfactory solutions. The course will focus on understanding the complete nuclear reactor system including the balance of plant, support systems and resulting interdependencies affecting the overall safety of the plant and regulatory oversight. Both the Seabrook and Pilgrim nuclear plant simulators will be used as part of the educational experience to provide as realistic as possible understanding of nuclear power systems short of being at the reactor. | Youtube list | Web page |
See also[edit]
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