The Future of the Internet: A New Stanford Course

Here is a new and free course to come out of a Stan­ford Uni­ver­si­ty pro­gram that (full dis­clo­sure) I help orga­nize. It’s called The Future of the Inter­net: Archi­tec­ture and Pol­i­cy (iTunes), and it’s taught by Ramesh Johari. The course, designed for non-techies, gets into the impor­tant ques­tion of whether the inter­net will remain “neu­tral” and freely avail­able to you and me. This course will appeal to any­one who has ever liked the work of Lawrence Lessig. (Please note that we’ll be rolling out a cou­ple more lec­tures in this course on a rolling basis.)

Check out the com­plete course descrip­tion below (and click here for many more free uni­ver­si­ty cours­es):

“The Inter­net today has evolved a long way from its hum­ble begin­nings as a fed­er­al­ly fund­ed research project. As a soci­ety, we find our­selves increas­ing­ly depen­dent on the Inter­net for our dai­ly rou­tine; and yet, the future of the Inter­net remains a mat­ter of vig­or­ous polit­i­cal, eco­nom­ic, and aca­d­e­m­ic debate. This debate cen­ters around own­er­ship: who will own the infra­struc­ture, and who will own the con­tent that the net­work deliv­ers? Unfor­tu­nate­ly, most of this debate does not involve a sub­stan­tive dis­cus­sion of the “archi­tec­ture” of the net­work, or the role that archi­tec­tur­al design will play in shap­ing the own­er­ship of the future glob­al net­work.

This course pro­vides a non-tech­ni­cal intro­duc­tion to the archi­tec­ture of the Inter­net, present and future. Stu­dents will be tak­en on a tour through the inner work­ings of the net­work, with a view toward how these details inform the cur­rent debate about “net­work neu­tral­i­ty” and the own­er­ship of the future Inter­net.”

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A History of the West: 52 Free Videos

The West­ern Tra­di­tion is a free series of videos that traces the arc of west­ern civ­i­liza­tion. Start­ing in Ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome, the sur­vey pro­ceeds to cov­er the Byzan­tine Empire and Medieval Europe, then the Renais­sance, Enlight­en­ment, and Indus­tri­al Rev­o­lu­tion, and final­ly ends up in 20th cen­tu­ry Europe and Amer­i­ca. Pre­sent­ed by UCLA pro­fes­sor Eugen Weber, an impres­sive Euro­pean his­to­ri­an, the video series includes over 2,700 images from the Met­ro­pol­i­tan Muse­um of Art that illus­trate some of the West’s great cul­tur­al achieve­ments. Each of the 52 videos runs about 30 min­utes. So you’re get­ting an amaz­ing 26 hours of con­tent for free.

You can stream all of the videos from this page.

You can find The West­ern Tra­di­tion list­ed in our col­lec­tion, 1,700 Free Online Cours­es from Top Uni­ver­si­ties.

If you would like to sign up for Open Culture’s free email newslet­ter, please find it here. Or fol­low our posts on Threads, Face­book, BlueSky or Mastodon.

If you would like to sup­port the mis­sion of Open Cul­ture, con­sid­er mak­ing a dona­tion to our site. It’s hard to rely 100% on ads, and your con­tri­bu­tions will help us con­tin­ue pro­vid­ing the best free cul­tur­al and edu­ca­tion­al mate­ri­als to learn­ers every­where. You can con­tribute through Pay­Pal, Patre­on, and Ven­mo (@openculture). Thanks!

10 Free University Courses on iTunes

We haven’t talked about the uni­verse of uni­ver­si­ty pod­casts in some time. So let’s get back to it.Below, we have high­light­ed ten full-fledged cours­es from top flight uni­ver­si­ties. All of these cours­es can be down­loaded to your iPod for free. That’s a price that you can’t beat. (You can see our com­plete col­lec­tion of free online cours­es here.)

1. Euro­pean His­to­ry from the Renais­sance to the Present (UC Berke­ley)

“This course is an intro­duc­tion to Euro­pean his­to­ry from around 1500 to the present. The cen­tral ques­tions that it address­es are how and why Europe–a small, rel­a­tive­ly poor, and polit­i­cal­ly frag­ment­ed place–became the motor of glob­al­iza­tion and a world civ­i­liza­tion in its own right.”

–Thomas Laque­ur, Pro­fes­sor of His­to­ry

2. Geog­ra­phy of World Cul­tures (Stan­ford Uni­ver­si­ty)

Even in a glob­al­ized world, peo­ple con­tin­ue to be joined togeth­er and divid­ed asun­der by the lan­guages they speak, the reli­gions they fol­low, and the eth­nic iden­ti­ties to which they belong. This map-inten­sive course exam­ines every world region, seek­ing to under­stand how places vary from each oth­er with regard to the cul­tur­al attrib­ut­es of their inhab­i­tants. (Note: This course is being rolled out in week­ly install­ments.)

–Mar­tin Lewis, Lec­tur­er in His­to­ry, Inter­im Direc­tor, Pro­gram in Inter­na­tion­al Rela­tions

3. Old Eng­lish in Con­text (Oxford Uni­ver­si­ty)

A four lec­ture mini-course on how Eng­lish became Eng­lish dur­ing the medieval peri­od.

–Dr Stu­art Lee, OUCS

4. Physics for Future Pres­i­dents (UC Berke­ley)

This course gives you the physics you need to know to be a pres­i­dent, Supreme Court jus­tice, diplo­mat, busi­ness­man, lawyer, foot­ball coach, or oth­er world leader.

–Richard Muller, Pro­fes­sor of Physics.

NOTE: Tthe same course hap­pens also to appear on Google Video. Sim­ply go to Google Video and per­form a search with the fol­low­ing key­words: physics 10 berke­ley.

5. Quan­tum Mechan­ics (UC Davis)

If Physics for Future Pres­i­dents is too basic for you, you can get into some more heavy duty sci­ence right here.

–John Tern­ing, Asso­ciate Pro­fes­sor of Physics

6. The His­tor­i­cal Jesus (Stan­ford Uni­ver­si­ty)

Who was the his­tor­i­cal Jesus of Nazareth? What did he actu­al­ly say? In short, what are the dif­fer­ences — and sim­i­lar­i­ties — between the Jesus who lived and died in his­to­ry and the Christ who lives on in believ­ers’ faith?

–Thomas Shee­han, Pro­fes­sor of Reli­gious Stud­ies and Pro­fes­sor Emer­i­tus of Phi­los­o­phy

7. Under­stand­ing Com­put­ers and the Inter­net (Har­vard Uni­ver­si­ty)

This course demys­ti­fies com­put­ers and the Inter­net (along with their jar­gon) so that stu­dents under­stand not only what they can do with each, but also how each works and why.

–David Malan, Instruc­tor

8. Entre­pre­neur­ship and Busi­ness Plan­ning (Carnegie Mel­lon)

This class par­al­lels a course being offered at Carnegie Mel­lon. It cov­ers the ins-and-outs of start­ing a new ven­ture, look­ing at how to devel­op ideas for new com­pa­nies, write busi­ness plans, cre­ate teams. It also looks at typ­i­cal b‑school top­ics: mar­ket­ing, com­pet­i­tive strat­e­gy, sales, pric­ing, fund­ing and finance.

–Mark Juliano, Adjunct Pro­fes­sor

9. The Lit­er­a­ture of Cri­sis (Stan­ford Uni­ver­si­ty)

In look­ing at great works by Pla­to, Sopho­cles, Shake­speare, Vergil, and Voltaire, this course explores crises that change the course of indi­vid­u­als and larg­er cul­tures.

–Marsh McCall, Pro­fes­sor of Clas­sics

–Mar­tin Evans, Pro­fes­sor in Eng­lish

10. Exis­ten­tial­ism in Lit­er­a­ture & Film (UC Berke­ley)

The course looks at efforts “to rein­ter­pret the Judeo/Christian God, and to deter­mine in what sense God is still a liv­ing God.” Along the way it looks at “Dostoyevsky’s and Kierkegaard’s attempts to pre­serve a non-the­o­log­i­cal ver­sion of the God of Chris­tian­i­ty, as well as Nietzsche’s attempt to save us from belief in any ver­sion of God offered by our tra­di­tion.” Films also get dis­cussed here.

–Hubert Drey­fus, Pro­fes­sor of Phi­los­o­phy

If you know of oth­er good cours­es avail­able via pod­cast, please

ma**@oc******.com











/” target=“_blank”>email us and let us know.

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Five Stanford Courses Available as Free Podcasts on iTunes

Over the past six months, Stan­ford has released sev­er­al pod­casts of full-fledged cours­es on iTunes. This past week, the uni­ver­si­ty released yet anoth­er — The Geog­ra­phy of World Cul­tures. You can now down­load five cours­es in total, all for free.Below, you’ll find links to each course, plus descrip­tions of what ground each course cov­ers. Please note that some of these cours­es can be down­loaded in full right now, while oth­ers are being released in week­ly install­ments. If you sub­scribe, you’ll receive all new install­ments when they come out.

For more pod­casts from lead­ing uni­ver­si­ties, please vis­it our Uni­ver­si­ty Pod­cast Col­lec­tion.

1. The His­tor­i­cal Jesus

Who was the his­tor­i­cal Jesus of Nazareth? What did he actu­al­ly say and do, as con­trast­ed with what ear­ly Chris­tians (e.g., Paul and the Gospel writ­ers) believed that he said and did? What did the man Jesus actu­al­ly think of him­self and of his mis­sion, as con­trast­ed with the mes­sian­ic and even divine claims that the New Tes­ta­ment makes about him? In short, what are the dif­fer­ences — and con­ti­nu­ities — between the Jesus who lived and died in his­to­ry and the Christ who lives on in believ­ers’ faith?

Over the last four decades his­tor­i­cal schol­ar­ship on Jesus and his times — whether con­duct­ed by Jews, Chris­tians, or non-believ­ers — has arrived at a strong con­sen­sus about what this unde­ni­ably his­tor­i­cal fig­ure (born ca. 4 BCE, died ca. 30 CE) said and did, and how e pre­sent­ed him­self and his mes­sage to his Jew­ish audi­ence. Often that his­tor­i­cal evi­dence about Jesus does not eas­i­ly dove­tail with the tra­di­tion­al doc­trines of Chris­tian­i­ty. How then might one adju­di­cate those con­flict­ing claims?

This is a course about his­to­ry, not about faith or the­ol­o­gy. It will exam­ine the best avail­able lit­er­ary and his­tor­i­cal evi­dence about Jesus and his times and will dis­cuss method­olo­gies for inter­pret­ing that evi­dence, in order to help par­tic­i­pants make their own judg­ments and draw their own con­clu­sions.

Thomas Shee­han, Pro­fes­sor of Reli­gious Stud­ies and Pro­fes­sor Emer­i­tus of Phi­los­o­phy

Thomas Shee­han joined Stan­ford’s Reli­gious Stud­ies fac­ul­ty in 1999 after teach­ing phi­los­o­phy for 30 years in the Unit­ed States and Italy. His inter­ests embrace clas­si­cal Greek and medieval phi­los­o­phy, 20th-cen­tu­ry Ger­man phi­los­o­phy and its rela­tion to reli­gious ques­tions, and Cen­tral Amer­i­can lib­er­a­tion move­ments. His many books and pub­li­ca­tions include: Becom­ing Hei­deg­ger (2006); Edmund Husserl: Psy­cho­log­i­cal and Tran­scen­den­tal Phe­nom­e­nol­o­gy and the Encounter with Hei­deg­ger (1997); Karl Rah­n­er: The Philo­soph­i­cal Foun­da­tions (1987); The First Com­ing: How the King­dom of God Became Chris­tian­i­ty (1986); and Hei­deg­ger, the Man and the Thinker (1981).

2. Mod­ern The­o­ret­i­cal Physics: Quan­tum Entan­gle­ment (Video)

The old Copen­hagen inter­pre­ta­tion of quan­tum mechan­ics asso­ci­at­ed with Niels Bohr is giv­ing way to a more pro­found inter­pre­ta­tion based on the idea of quan­tum entan­gle­ment. Entan­gle­ment not only replaces the obso­lete notion of the col­lapse of the wave func­tion but is also the basis for Bell’s famous the­o­rem, the new par­a­digm of quan­tum com­put­ing, and final­ly the wide­ly dis­cussed “Many Worlds” inter­pre­ta­tion of quan­tum mechan­ics by Everett.

This course stands on its own, but also serves as a con­tin­u­a­tion of a year-long course look­ing at the basics of quan­tum mechan­ics, entan­gle­ment, Bell’s the­o­rems, ele­ments of quan­tum com­put­ing, quan­tum tele­por­ta­tion, and sim­i­lar mate­r­i­al.

Leonard Susskind, Felix Bloch Pro­fes­sor in Physics

Leonard Susskind received a PhD from Cor­nell Uni­ver­si­ty and has been a pro­fes­sor at Stan­ford since 1979. He has won both the Pregel Award from the New York Acad­e­my of Sci­ence and the J.J. Saku­rai Prize in the­o­ret­i­cal par­ti­cle physics. His cur­rent research inter­ests include the struc­ture of hadrons, instan­tons, quark con­fine­ment, and quan­tum cos­mol­o­gy. He is a mem­ber of the Nation­al Acad­e­my of Sci­ences.

3. Vir­gil’s Aeneid: Anato­my of a Clas­sic

The cen­tral text in the canon of Latin lit­er­a­ture is Virgil’s Aeneid, an epic poem in twelve books com­posed more than two thou­sand years ago under the Roman emper­or Augus­tus. The poem was an instant hit. It became a school text imme­di­ate­ly and has remained cen­tral to stud­ies of Roman cul­ture to the present day. How can a poem cre­at­ed in such a remote lit­er­ary and social envi­ron­ment speak so elo­quent­ly to sub­se­quent ages? In this course we will dis­cov­er what kind of poem this is and what kind of hero Aeneas is. Our stud­ies will focus chiefly on the poem itself and on wider aspects of Roman cul­ture. It will be essen­tial to com­mit to read­ing the poem ahead of time, at a rate of about 100 pages per week. We will use the ener­getic trans­la­tion by Robert Fitzger­ald.

Susan­na Braund, Pro­fes­sor of Clas­sics

Susan­na Braund arrived at Stan­ford from Yale in 2004. Pri­or to that, she taught in the UK for twen­ty years, at the uni­ver­si­ties of Exeter, Bris­tol, and Lon­don. She is the author, edi­tor, and trans­la­tor of numer­ous books and papers on Latin lit­er­a­ture, espe­cial­ly Roman satire and epic poet­ry, includ­ing an intro­duc­to­ry vol­ume enti­tled Latin Lit­er­a­ture (Rout­ledge, 2002). Her pas­sion for mak­ing con­nec­tions between antiq­ui­ty and the mod­ern world is reflect­ed in her reg­u­lar radio broad­casts for KZSU called “Myth Made Mod­ern.”

4. Geog­ra­phy of World Cul­tures

Despite the sup­pos­ed­ly homog­e­niz­ing effects of glob­al­iza­tion, peo­ple con­tin­ue to be joined togeth­er and divid­ed asun­der by the lan­guages they speak, the reli­gions they fol­low, and the eth­nic iden­ti­ties to which they belong. Such cul­tur­al fea­tures all have spe­cif­ic geo­gra­phies, tied to par­tic­u­lar places. But while cul­tur­al-geo­graph­i­cal terms such as “the Ara­bic world” and “the Islam­ic world” are used ubiq­ui­tous­ly, many peo­ple remain uncer­tain where such “worlds” are and how they dif­fer from each oth­er.

The pur­pose of this map-inten­sive course is to explore the loca­tion­al dynam­ics of the world’s lan­guages, reli­gions, and eth­nic group­ings. We will exam­ine every world region, seek­ing to under­stand how places vary from each oth­er with regard to the cul­tur­al attrib­ut­es of their inhab­i­tants. The course will explore the his­tor­i­cal forces that have gen­er­at­ed cul­tur­al diver­si­ty, and will care­ful­ly exam­ine the process­es of con­tem­po­rary trans­for­ma­tion.

Mar­tin Lewis, Lec­tur­er in His­to­ry, Inter­im Direc­tor, Pro­gram in Inter­na­tion­al Rela­tions

Mar­tin Lewis received a PhD from UC Berke­ley in geog­ra­phy. He is the author or co-author of four books, includ­ing The Myth of Con­ti­nents: A Cri­tique of Meta­geog­ra­phy (with Karen Wigen) and Diver­si­ty Amid Glob­al­iza­tion: World Regions, Envi­ron­ment, Devel­op­ment (with Lester Rown­tree, Marie Price, and William Wyck­off).

5. The Lit­er­a­ture of Cri­sis

Most human lives con­tain major turn­ing points: crises that trans­form an individual’s future devel­op­ment. On a much larg­er scale, cul­tures under­go crises too: polit­i­cal, intel­lec­tu­al, and reli­gious changes that alter for­ev­er the course of human his­to­ry. This course will focus on both kinds of cri­sis.

We will con­sid­er the per­son­al upheavals brought about by the polit­i­cal, social, reli­gious, and erot­ic ties of our authors and their char­ac­ters. These crises were piv­otal moments which dra­mat­i­cal­ly altered the tra­jec­to­ry of their lives. More­over, each of our texts reflects not only a per­son­al cri­sis but also the tur­bu­lence of its cul­tur­al envi­ron­ment; and each devel­ops a unique strat­e­gy for cop­ing with it.

In addi­tion to offer­ing a unique intro­duc­tion to these great texts, this course aims to pro­vide a con­cep­tu­al and his­tor­i­cal frame­work enabling you to address crises in your own life and in the mod­ern world with a greater degree of under­stand­ing and, per­haps, a clear­er sense of how to sur­vive them.

Marsh McCall, Pro­fes­sor of Clas­sics

Marsh McCall has taught at Stan­ford for 30 years and was the found­ing Dean of Stan­ford Con­tin­u­ing Stud­ies. He received the Dinkel­spiel Award for Out­stand­ing Ser­vice to Under­grad­u­ate Edu­ca­tion and the annu­al Phi Beta Kap­pa Under­grad­u­ate Teach­ing Award.

Mar­tin Evans, William R. Kenan Jr. Pro­fes­sor in Eng­lish

Born in Cardiff, Great Britain, in 1935, Pro­fes­sor Evans emi­grat­ed to the Unit­ed States in 1963 after earn­ing his B.A., M.A., and D.Phil. degrees at Oxford Uni­ver­si­ty. His first post in this coun­try was as an Assis­tant Pro­fes­sor of Eng­lish in the Stan­ford Eng­lish Depart­ment, and he has been on the fac­ul­ty here ever since. From 1977–81, he served as Asso­ciate Dean of Human­i­ties and Sci­ences, from 1981–86 as the Direc­tor of Under­grad­u­ate Stud­ies for the Eng­lish Depart­ment, and from 1988–91 as Chair­man of the Eng­lish Depart­ment.

Get more free Stan­ford cours­es here.

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E‑learning Programs from Top American Universities


      Online learn­ing — or e‑learning — has gone from being fair­ly uncom­mon to fair­ly wide­spread over the past five years. But, a quick look at the list of uni­ver­si­ties offer­ing online cours­es reveals that it’s most­ly sec­ond and third tier schools that have entered the online mar­ket, and gen­er­al­ly not lead­ing col­leges and uni­ver­si­ties. At some point, we’ll get around to dis­cussing why the lead­ers have large­ly balked at the prospect of going online. But, for today, our mis­sion is to high­light some instances in which lead­ing schools have start­ed exper­i­ment­ing with e‑learning, and we’ll grow this list over time. Let’s start with 10 exam­ples.
  • Colum­bia Uni­ver­si­ty — Teach­ers Col­lege
    • Through this pro­gram geared for edu­ca­tors, you can obtain online cer­tifi­cates in the fol­low­ing areas: Teach­ing and Learn­ing with Tech­nol­o­gy, Design­ing Inter­ac­tive Mul­ti­me­dia Instruc­tion, & Cog­ni­tion and Tech­nol­o­gy. Click for more info.
  • Duke Uni­ver­si­ty — Exec­u­tive MBA
    • Duke’s Fuqua School of Busi­ness offers an Exec­u­tive MBA pro­gram that takes place most­ly online. (Note: the pro­gram does also include short vis­its to cam­pus.) The expec­ta­tion is that you’d spend 15–25 hours per week using Inter­net-enabled tech­nol­o­gy to com­plete your course­work.
  • eCor­nell
    • Estab­lished and whol­ly-owned by Cor­nell Uni­ver­si­ty, eCor­nell pro­vides online cours­es in the areas of strat­e­gy, lead­er­ship and man­age­ment devel­op­ment, human resources, finan­cial man­age­ment, and hos­pi­tal­i­ty man­age­ment. Stu­dents par­tic­i­pat­ing in the pro­gram can receive one of a num­ber of cer­tifi­cates. See course cat­a­logue.
  • Har­vard Sum­mer School
    • High school and col­lege stu­dents can now take sum­mer school cours­es at Har­vard via the inter­net and get col­lege cred­it. Cours­es include Neu­ro­bi­ol­o­gy, Intro­duc­tion to Inter­na­tion­al Rela­tions, and oth­ers. Get more info here.
  • Johns Hop­kins — Cen­ter for Tal­ent­ed Youth
    • Geared for stu­dents between grades 5 and 12, this pro­gram com­ing out of Johns Hop­kins “began offer­ing dis­tance cours­es in 1983 with assis­tance from the Nation­al Endow­ment for the Human­i­ties. The pro­gram has now grown to more than 7,000 enroll­ments year­ly, with stu­dents through­out the Unit­ed States and more than 60 coun­tries.”
  • MIT — Sys­tem Design and Man­age­ment
    • Spon­sored by MIT’s Sloan School of Man­age­ment and the School of Engi­neer­ing, the SDM pro­gram lasts 24 months and cul­mi­nates in a Mas­ter of Sci­ence degree in Engi­neer­ing and Man­age­ment. Most of the grad­u­ate pro­gram takes place online. How­ev­er, there are some on-cam­pus require­ments. Click for more infor­ma­tion.
  • Stan­ford Uni­ver­si­ty
    • Mas­ters Pro­grams — Through Stan­ford, you can earn Mas­ter’s degrees entire­ly online in the fol­low­ing areas: Bio­med­ical Infor­mat­ics, Com­put­er Sci­ence, Elec­tri­cal Engi­neer­ing, Man­age­ment Sci­ence and Engi­neer­ing, and Mechan­i­cal Engi­neer­ing. Get more info here.
    • Writ­ing Pro­gram — Cre­at­ed by a part­ner­ship between Stan­ford’s Steg­n­er Writ­ing Pro­gram and Stan­ford Con­tin­u­ing Stud­ies, this pro­gram allows stu­dents any­where to take top flight writ­ing work­shops online.

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25 UC Berkeley Courses Available via Free Video

Not long ago, we wrote a pop­u­lar piece about UC-Berke­ley’s iTunes ini­tia­tive which, to sum it up,allows any­one, any­where, to down­load com­plete uni­ver­si­ty cours­es to their iPods for free. Amaz­ing. Today, we want to point out that Berke­ley also makes avail­able full-fledged cours­es via video/webcast. You can find the com­plete list of cours­es here, but below we have list­ed below 25 cours­es that fig­ure into a “core” under­grad­u­ate cur­ricu­lum. In short, this list includes many good nuts and bolts cours­es, which will teach you a lot and, even bet­ter, cost you noth­ing. Each of these cours­es, com­ing straight from the class­room, can be accessed with Real Play­er, and some can also be accessed as MP3s.

On a relat­ed note, our Uni­ver­si­ty Pod­cast Col­lec­tion and our col­lec­tion of Free Cours­es will give you access to many more uni­ver­si­ty lec­tures and cours­es, so be sure to give them a look. You may also want to check out our “playlist” of intel­li­gent videos on YouTube as well as our recent piece: 10 Signs of Intel­li­gent Life at YouTube.

UC Berke­ley Cours­es:

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50+ Free Courses from UC Berkeley on iTunes

This is noth­ing short of impres­sive. Last April, UC Berke­ley, one of the pre­miere uni­ver­si­ties in the coun­try, announced its plan to put com­plete aca­d­e­m­ic cours­es on iTunes. Fast for­ward nine months, and you can already find 59 full cours­es avail­able as pod­casts. Sim­ply click here to access Berke­ley’s iTunes site (or here for the Rss feed).No mat­ter where you live, you can access at no cost the very same cours­es attend­ed by stu­dents pay­ing full tuition. And, giv­en the crit­i­cal mass of cours­es being offered across a range of dis­ci­plines, you can put togeth­er your own per­son­al­ized cur­ricu­lum and expand your hori­zons on the fly.

If the human­i­ties are your thing, you can take US His­to­ry: From Civ­il War to Present, Exis­ten­tial­ism in Lit­er­a­ture & Film, or Euro­pean Civ­i­liza­tion from the Renais­sance to Present. If you’re into the social sci­ences, you may want to con­sid­er World Reli­gions, Peo­ples and States, US For­eign Pol­i­cy after 9/11, Human Emo­tions, or Intro­duc­tion to Sta­tis­tics. Turn­ing to the hard sci­ences, you can take your pick from Physics for Future Pres­i­dents, Intro­duc­tion to Chem­istry, Gen­er­al Astron­o­my, and Gen­er­al Biol­o­gy. Final­ly, for those with a tech­nol­o­gy bent, you can con­sid­er lis­ten­ing in on An Intro­duc­tion to Com­put­ers, The His­to­ry of Infor­ma­tion or even The Foun­da­tions of Amer­i­can Cyber­Cul­ture. But, if these par­tic­u­lar cours­es aren’t for you, there are many more to choose from.

Berke­ley’s col­lec­tion has gen­er­al­ly remained off of peo­ple’s radar screen, which is too bad. It’s an excel­lent pod­cast col­lec­tion, one of the best out there. Hope­ful­ly we can help read­ers find out what they are miss­ing.

For more, please see our col­lec­tion of Free Cours­es from top uni­ver­si­ties.

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Open Culture was founded by Dan Colman.