June 25, 2013

Late bloomer

It's hot, it's dry, it's windy in the afternoon. All plants and animals are pretty much shut down, waiting for monsoon rains. Except this guy. I don't really know what's up with him because he usually blooms on Kath's birthday, at the end of April. But, here he is, and the bees are happy.


Stuff gets done early around here now. Up at 4:45. Take Emma for walk. Eat breakfast. Go bike. Back at 8:00. Do chores. Go in around 9:30. This leaves a long time inside to get into trouble. But I have discovered the perfect afternoon entertainment: Coursera.

Coursera offers MOOCs (Massive Online Open Courses). For free! Initially I thought it might be a bit "fluffy", it being free and all, but this is great stuff. I am taking two courses currently: Archaeology's Dirty Little Secrets and Nutrition for Health Promotion and Disease Prevention. Both are 8 and 6 weeks long, respectively, and new material is posted every week.

The ADLS is taught by a team from Brown University, and it is total fun as well as educational. There are video lectures, conversations with archaeological teams, sound bites, great reading materials, quizzes, and assignments. I must admit that I faithfully take the quizzes, but I have been reluctant on the assignments. Not that they are not fun (they are), but they are peer reviewed. Hum. I do not need a certificate of completion so I have decided to bow out of submitting mine for review. So call me a chicken.

I have just started the Nutrition course taught by the University of California San Francisco and it looks to be more scholarly, but also very informative. I am very weak in the sciences and I already see that I will have to repeat some lectures a couple of times, but you can, and I am learning great stuff.

Both courses make a lot of other information on their topics available that is worth exploring. Oh my, what great invention the Web! It makes learning so much more fun; I love all the different approaches from listening to music to reading addresses to scholarly assemblies to movies to PDF slides to videos.

Sorry, gotta go to class.

1 comment:

webb said...

Well, Coed, that's really cool. There has been a lot in our papers about the Univ of Va doing free online classes. Apparently "we"shouldn't be giving away "our"knowledge for free! Talk about haughty!

Don't know where to send you, but i would start at uva.edu and see if anything tickles your fancy. Can't wait to retire so i can do some of that kind of stuff.

Our community college allows seniors to audit for free, and there is one 5 minutes from the house! I'll be doing that,too!