Music for Our Economic Times, Or a Creative R.E.M. Remix

Not to be too pes­simistic …

(PS You can find oth­er remix­es here and here.)

Sub­scribe to Our Feed

The Top Five Collections of Free University Courses


Last week, the launch of Stan­ford Engi­neer­ing Every­where, fea­tur­ing 10 free com­put­er sci­ence and engi­neer­ing cours­es, got no short­age of buzz on the net. This led me to think, why not high­light oth­er major col­lec­tions of free uni­ver­si­ty courses/resources. As you’ll see, each col­lec­tion offers count­less hours of free, high qual­i­ty con­tent. Down­load the audio and video to your iPod or com­put­er, and you can get lost here for days, weeks, even months. A per­fect way to dis­tract your­self on the cheap dur­ing the reces­sion. For many more free cours­es, be sure to see our larg­er col­lec­tion of Free Cours­es, which now includes over 250 free class­es from lead­ing uni­ver­si­ties.

1. UC Berke­ley — Stan­ford’s neigh­bor to the north makes avail­able a large num­ber of cours­es online. The col­lec­tion fea­tures lec­tures tak­en direct­ly from the under­grad­u­ate class­room. And they can be accessed through mul­ti­ple means — that is, through the web/rss feed, through Berke­ley’s iTune­sU site, and via YouTube. Over­all, this is prob­a­bly the deep­est col­lec­tion of free aca­d­e­m­ic con­tent out there. And here you’ll find one of the most pop­u­lar under­grad­u­ate cours­es at UC Berke­ley: Physics for Future Pres­i­dents, taught by Richard Muller. You can down­load the course in audio (iTunes — Feed — MP3s) or watch it in video here.

2. Yale — Last fall, Yale launched an open course ini­tia­tive known as Open Yale Cours­es. The uni­ver­si­ty ini­tial­ly came out of the gate with sev­en cours­es, and it plans to release anoth­er eight this fall. As you will see, Yale’s project is high-touch. Each course fea­tures a syl­labus, read­ing assign­ments, class notes, and pol­ished lec­tures, which, when tak­en togeth­er, con­tribute to a well-round­ed learn­ing expe­ri­ence. The lec­tures can be down­loaded in one of five for­mats (text, audio, flash video, low band­width quick­time video, and high band­width quick­time video). And quite notably, Yale has designed the cours­es to be down­loaded fair­ly eas­i­ly, which means that you can put the lec­tures onto an mp3 play­er, even if you’re only a lit­tle tech savvy. Here’s a list of the course titles that you will find: Fron­tiers and Con­tro­ver­sies in Astro­physics, Mod­ern Poet­ry, Death, Fun­da­men­tals of Physics, Intro­duc­tion to Polit­i­cal Phi­los­o­phy, Intro­duc­tion to Psy­chol­o­gy, and Intro­duc­tion to the Old Tes­ta­ment.

3. MIT — By now, MIT’s Open­Course­Ware project is no secret. Lead­ing the open course charge, MIT has put online mate­ri­als from 1,800 cours­es, includ­ing syl­labi, read­ing lists, course notes, assign­ments, etc. If there was a down­side to the MIT ini­tia­tive, it was that it orig­i­nal­ly lacked audio and video lec­tures. These days, how­ev­er, MIT has start­ed to fill that gap by adding audio and video com­po­nents to a num­ber of cours­es, includ­ing Wal­ter Lewin’s very pop­u­lar and pub­li­cized course, Clas­si­cal Mechan­ics. Down­load the course lec­tures in video via iTunes or in var­i­ous for­mats here.

4. Indi­an Insti­tutes of Tech­nol­o­gy — In India, there are sev­en insti­tutes ded­i­cat­ed to train­ing some of the world’s top sci­en­tists and engi­neers, mak­ing the coun­try an up and com­ing world pow­er. They are col­lec­tive­ly known as the IITs, or the Indi­an Insti­tutes of Tech­nol­o­gy. And now more than 50 IIT cours­es are being made avail­able in Eng­lish on YouTube for free. (The main page is here; the cours­es are actu­al­ly here.) Some of the titles fea­tured here include: Intro­duc­tion to Com­put­er Graph­ics, Core Sci­ence Math­e­mat­ics, Com­put­er Net­works, and Intro­duc­tion To Prob­lem Solv­ing & Pro­gram­ming.

5. Stan­ford - Yes, last week we men­tioned the 10 free cours­es com­ing out of the Engi­neer­ing School. But we should also men­tion the open course col­lec­tion main­tained by the larg­er uni­ver­si­ty. Stan­ford’s iTunes site gives you access to dozens of lec­tures and lets you down­load close to 30 cours­es in their entire­ty. Clear­ly, the think­ing pub­lic loves physics (wit­ness above), and among the Stan­ford cours­es you’ll find a mul­ti-course overview of mod­ern physics by Leonard Susskind, who has waged a long-run­ning “Black Hole War” with Stephen Hawk­ing (see his new book on that sub­ject here). The lover of the lib­er­al arts will also find some gems, includ­ing: The His­tor­i­cal Jesus, His­to­ry of the Inter­na­tion­al Sys­tem, Geog­ra­phy of World Cul­tures, and African Amer­i­can His­to­ry: The Mod­ern Free­dom Strug­gle. Last­ly, I’ll men­tion that many cours­es can also be found on Stan­ford’s YouTube col­lec­tion in video. Vis­it here.

We’ve inte­grat­ed all of these cours­es into our own meta list of Free Cours­es from lead­ing uni­ver­si­ties. It now includes rough­ly 250 cours­es, and we’d encour­age you to book­mark the page and use it often. Enjoy.

Sub­scribe to Our Feed

by | Permalink | Make a Comment ( 8 ) |

2008 MacArthur “Genius” Grants Awarded

The 2008 MacArthurs were just announced. And one goes to Alex Ross, the New York­er music crit­ic who recent­ly pub­lished The Rest is Noise, a wide­ly praised work that makes sense of 20th cen­tu­ry clas­si­cal music. Below we have Ross talk­ing about his musi­cal back­ground, the New York music scene and the gen­er­al gist of his book.

Sub­scribe to Our Feed

via Kottke.org

Michael Moore’s New Film (Slacker) Now Free Online

Just a quick reminder. Start­ing today (Sep­tem­ber 23), you can down­load Michael Moore’s new fea­ture film — Slack­er Upris­ing — via the web for free. This is unfor­tu­nate­ly only avail­able to US and Cana­di­an res­i­dents, and it will remain free for three weeks. You can get more info and down­load the film here.

Sub­scribe to Our Feed

by | Permalink | Make a Comment ( 1 ) |

The New York Times Picks Five Online Lectures

In case this got lost over the week­end I am bump­ing it back up: The New York Times has a piece run­ning this week­end that sur­veys the land­scape of online uni­ver­si­ty lec­tures. (Get a jum­bo list of free cours­es here.) Along the way, they focus on five lec­tures that “no one should miss.” They are as fol­lows:

1.) Wal­ter H. G. Lewin, Pow­ers of 10 (M.I.T.)

2.) Randy Pausch, Real­ly Achiev­ing Your Child­hood Dreams (Carnegie Mel­lon)

3.) Dan Ariely, Pre­dictably Irra­tional (Duke and M.I.T.)

We post­ed this one below.

4.) Lang­don Ham­mer, Mod­ern Poet­ry (Yale)

5.) Chris­tine Hayes, Intro­duc­tion to the Old Tes­ta­ment (Yale)

Sub­scribe to Our Feed

by | Permalink | Make a Comment ( 1 ) |

Chris Rock on Bill Clinton, Sarah Palin and Shooting Moose

Because it’s elec­tion sea­son and Rock cracks me up …

Sub­scribe to Our Feed

Live Performances at AOL Sessions

Cour­tesy of Metafil­ter:

“AOL Ses­sions has live videos from more than 150 dif­fer­ent artists spe­cial­ly record­ed for the series. Here are just a few of the artists on offer: Paul McCart­ney, Bri­an Wil­son, Mod­est Mouse, Tom Pet­ty, Red Hot Chili Pep­pers, Weez­er, Sarah McLach­lan, Bon­nie Raitt, Iggy Pop, and more. To the left of the videos there’s a Q&A link that has short inter­view videos with the artists as well as behind the scenes footage and longer inter­views.”

Beatboxing Flute

To the tune of the Inspec­tor Gad­get Theme. So far viewed 14.5 mil­lion times. Pret­ty amaz­ing. Take it away (and check out the musi­cian’s CD here) …

Added to our YouTube playlist.

Sub­scribe to Our Feed

Philip Roth’s New Novel: Read The First Chapter

Philip Roth’s lat­est is out. And, as one review­er described it, the nov­el, like his last two, is “ruth­less­ly eco­nom­i­cal and relent­less­ly death­bound.” You can read the first chap­ter of Indig­na­tion here for free. Or, buy the nov­el here.

The 2008 Bailout v. The Great Depression Bailouts

Key­ing off an opin­ion piece by Paul Krug­man, Eric Rauch­way, an Amer­i­can his­to­ri­an (and also an old grad school col­league of mine), offers an intrigu­ing analy­sis of the Bush/Paulson bailout and how it com­pares to the Hoover and FDR bailouts from the Depres­sion era. The dif­fer­ence between 1932/33 and 2008? In 2008 (get text of leaked plan here), Con­gress will have no over­sight and the exec­u­tive branch will be “behold­en to nobody and sub­ject to no review.” (Sound vague­ly famil­iar?) There will also be no stat­ed restric­tions on how much a giv­en cor­po­ra­tion can be assist­ed, and no require­ment that cor­po­ra­tions give the gov­ern­ment any­thing back in turn. (There’s not even a require­ment that the gov­ern­ment buy the bad debt for fair mar­ket val­ue.) Back in the 30s, how­ev­er,  “All loans had to be secured, couldn’t be made on for­eign secu­ri­ties or accep­tances, no more than 5% of the mon­ey could go to any one com­pa­ny, couldn’t exceed three years’ term, couldn’t pay fees or com­mis­sion to appli­cants for loans, and so forth. Rail­roads accept­ing such loans had to do so under terms accept­able to the reg­u­la­to­ry Inter­state Com­merce Com­mis­sion.”

The idea of hand­ing the Bush admin­is­tra­tion anoth­er blank check is hard­ly a hap­py one. We’ve been down that road before and things did­n’t exact­ly go smooth­ly.  But then again I’m not sure that the 1930s offers won­der­ful mod­els for cat­a­stro­phe man­age­ment (not that Rauch­way is say­ing that). Let’s hope that our lead­ers take a lit­tle time to think things through.

And, by the way, New Rule: No one on Wall Street should be allowed to make more than six fig­ures until they’ve cleaned up their mess and reim­bursed the tax­pay­ers. Yes, wish­ful think­ing I know, since appar­ent­ly Lehman, even hav­ing gone bank­rupt, has found a way to a share a $2.5 bil­lion bonus pool.

by | Permalink | Make a Comment ( 5 ) |

Solar Eclipse Seen From Outer Space

The NASA STEREO space­craft sees the disk of the Moon pass in front of the Sun in a view nev­er seen before by human eyes.” For more videos, see The Bad Astron­o­my chan­nel on YouTube, which we’ve added to our col­lec­tion: Intel­li­gent Life at YouTube: 70 Edu­ca­tion­al Video Col­lec­tions.

by | Permalink | Make a Comment ( 1 ) |


  • Great Lectures

  • Sign up for Newsletter

  • About Us

    Open Culture scours the web for the best educational media. We find the free courses and audio books you need, the language lessons & educational videos you want, and plenty of enlightenment in between.


    Advertise With Us

  • Archives

  • Search

  • Quantcast