| 4.601 Introduction to Art History (New Course) This course investigates the power of art in historical perspective, focusing on Euro-American traditions of art from the fourteenth to the twenty-first century. It examines changing conceptions of the artist, the work of art, and the discipline of art history, exploring the roles images and objects have played over time, how they functioned in various social, economic, and cultural contexts, and whose interests they served or sought to disrupt. |
|
Please support MIT OpenCourseWare |
|
| 24.917 ConLangs: How to Construct a Language (New Course) This course explores languages that have been deliberately constructed, including Esperanto, Klingon, and Tolkien's Elvish. Students construct their own languages while considering the basic linguistic characteristics of various languages of the world. Through regular assignments, students describe the phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, and writing system of their constructed language. The final assignment is a grammatical description of the new language. |
|
| 1.022 Introduction to Network Models (New Course) This course provides an introduction to complex networks and their structure and function, with examples from engineering, applied mathematics, and social sciences. Topics include spectral graph theory, notions of centrality, random graph models, contagion phenomena, cascades and diffusion, and opinion dynamics. |
|
Views from OCW Supporters |
|
| "Because I believe, that this is the way how to advance our world. And OCW is a wonderful project. Especially courses with recitations and exercises." -Martin, OCW Supporter > Read more |
|
We'd love to hear from you! |
|
Please share your story about how OCW has made an impact in your life. Whether our resources helped you brush up on your skills, find Open Educational Resources for your classroom, prepare for a course of study, or allowed you to satisfy your curiosity, hearing from learners and educators like you demonstrates the true value of OCW. |
|
For free resources for high school teachers and students, check out:
|
|
More free resources from MIT are available at:
|
|
|
|
|