От: ocw-mail@mit.edu
Отправлено: 24 января 2005 г.
19:41
Кому: ocw-mail@mit.edu
Тема: The MIT OpenCourseWare
Update -- Vol. 3, Issue 1
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The MIT OpenCourseWare Update: January 2005
A Monthly E-mail Newsletter for Users
and Friends of MIT OpenCourseWare
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The January 2005 MIT OpenCourseWare Update Contains:
1. New User Feature: MIT Curriculum Guide
2. MIT OCW's Approach to Video and Audio
3. Digging Deeper: Course 21M.361
4. A Frequently Asked Question
5. Comments
1. New User Feature: MIT Curriculum Guide
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Many users have contacted MIT OpenCourseWare (MIT OCW), asking for
information about MIT's curriculum so they would be able to design their own
course of self-study. In the interest of improving the user experience with MIT
OCW materials, we are now offering a
guide to the
MIT's undergraduate and graduate curriculum on the MIT OCW Web site.
Users are reminded that following these MIT curriculum requirements does not
make them eligible to receive a degree or any other sort of
certification. This is merely an informational service that MIT OCW is
providing for its users.
Again, users are reminded that MIT OCW is not a distance-learning
initiative, there is no registration or enrollment process required for
users to view course materials. Nor is there a certificate or degree
granted upon completion of the materials. MIT OCW is a publication of
the course materials that support the dynamic classroom interactions of an MIT
education.
We hope this serves as a useful tool for educators, students, and
self-learners interacting with the MIT OCW materials. Please feel free to
send us your feedback on this new MIT OCW user
feature.
2. MIT OCW's Approach to Video and Audio
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Video lectures are useful for users of MIT OCW, and we continue to
strategically publish video lectures from select faculty at MIT. But there are
several reasons that MIT OCW does not include video in every course. The main
concern is cost: While the technology for compressing and storing video is
becoming more affordable, it is still not affordable, or feasible from a
production standpoint, for us to be compressing 20 video lectures for all 915 of
our courses. MIT OCW does not have that kind of storage capacity at this
time.
We are hoping that by providing the syllabus, reading lists and lecture
notes, we are offering a chance for educators and students to jumpstart their
own teaching and learning within their chosen discipline. While the video
lectures for
Course
18.06: Linear Algebra, for example, are very easy for people with fast
Internet connections to watch, MIT OCW is not intended to be a complete distance
learning resource, it merely provides the raw materials of an MIT
education.
We do, however, offer complete video lecture series for the following
courses:
3. Digging Deeper: Course 21M.361
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While MIT is known as a world-class research and technology institution,
there is a very rich tradition of the study of the arts and humanities at the
school. Charged with the energy of new ideas, the
MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social
Sciences (SHASS) attracts many of the world's finest faculty, students, and
researchers. SHASS, in fact, is the common denominator of an MIT student's
undergraduate education, providing a foundation of knowledge that enhances
life-long learning in every field.
In this course students use computers and computer-aided technology as
compositional tools, that is, as a means to music-making and an avenue to
approach musical and acoustic concepts. Each unit of study consists of a series
of short composition projects using specific types of hardware and software in
clearly delineated ways. This involves live recording and digital editing,
digital processing, analog sound synthesis (real and virtual), MIDI sequencing,
and building interactive environments. For enrolled MIT students, the course
culminates in a large, final composition and a public concert.
The course
syllabus
is divided into four units: Sound Structures, Feedback, Structuring Sound, and
Interaction. There is also a
rich
list of suggested readings (including
Computer Music: Synthesis,
Composition, and Performance by Charles Dodge and Thomas Jerse), CDs, and
video that help illustrate the principles taught in the course. In addition,
Professor Ziporyn has compiled
11
labs that help teach students the principles of sound and music
composition.
This course has been translated into
Spanish
and
Portuguese
through MIT OCW's partnership with
Universia.net, a Madrid-based content
provider for more than 800 universities in Spain, Portugal, and Latin
America.
4. A Frequently Asked Question
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QUESTION: How do I find what courses are available?
ANSWER: MIT OCW offers the educational materials from
915 MIT courses.
There are three ways to access the materials: Utilize the Search function that
can be found in the left-hand corner of every page on the MIT OCW site. Search
for specific text, such as certain academic discipline area, across all courses
or within just one course. To perform a detailed search, use our
Advanced
Search.
A second way to see what courses are available is to click on
Course
List that is listed in the top right-corner navigation of every page on
the MIT OCW Web site. This will allow you to view the list of every available
course, grouped into the 33 MIT academic departments.
Or, view the courses currently available grouped by MIT department. The
departments that have MIT OCW course sites available are listed in the left-hand
navigation bar of the
MIT OCW
homepage. An example would be the MIT
Department
of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science. Click on the Electrical
Engineering and Computer Science link in the left navigation bar on
the MIT OCW homepage, and you will go to the department homepage, which
includes a complete list of MIT electrical engineering and computer science
courses offered, along with a brief description of the department and its
curriculum goals.
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MIT OpenCourseWare (MIT OCW) is a
large-scale, Web-based publishing initiative with the goal of providing free,
searchable access to MIT course materials for educators, students, and
individual learners around the world. These materials are offered in a single,
searchable structure spanning all of MIT's academic disciplines, and include
uniform metadata about the contents of the individual subject sites.
"The MIT OpenCourseWare Update" welcomes your feedback and suggestions
about this newsletter and the MIT OCW Web site. Please send your feedback to Jon
Paul Potts, MIT OCW Communications Manager, at
jpotts@mit.edu. Our mailing address is MIT
OpenCourseWare, 77 Massachusetts Avenue, Room 9-213, Cambridge, MA 02139.
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ersonally identifiable information about users
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