Showing posts with label courses. Show all posts
Showing posts with label courses. Show all posts

Friday, 5 February 2016

5 courses every Big Data geek should take

As we move forward in the informational age, the amount of pervasive data and technology in our lives can be overwhelming. To add to the digital mayhem, data and technology continues to grow at an exponential rate.

Since technological advancement has far surpassed what most of us had imagined, we are still all wondering what to do with this vast pot of knowledge. Progression as we know it will rely on this big data dissemination. To become one of the pioneers of this great field, here are five courses every aspiring big data analytics student should take:

1. Data structures and algorithms

2. Legal, ethical, and management issues in technology

3. Introduction to philosophy

4. Engineering and technology project management

5. Business intelligence (BI)

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Wednesday, 6 June 2012

8 FREE Online Computer Science Courses for Beginners and Advances Users

Many people want to learn computer science, but not many can afford to do so at the best institutions. Fortunately many of the best institutions in the world are opening up their courses so you can take a course from Stanford, MIT or Harvard simply by going online and learning at your own pace. Here are 8 ways you can take advantage of this.

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Tuesday, 6 December 2011

How Khan Academy Is Changing the Rules of Education

Carpenter, a serious-faced 10-year-old wearing a gray T-shirt and an impressive black digital watch, pauses for a second, fidgets, then clicks on “0 degrees.” Presto: The computer tells him that he’s correct. The software then generates another problem, followed by another, and yet another, until he’s nailed 10 in a row in just a few minutes. All told, he’s done an insane 642 inverse trig problems. “It took a while for me to get it,” he admits sheepishly.

Carpenter, who attends Santa Rita Elementary, a public school in Los Altos, California, shouldn’t be doing work anywhere near this advanced. In fact, when I visited his class this spring—in a sun-drenched room festooned with a papercraft X-wing fighter and student paintings of trees—the kids were supposed to be learning basic fractions, decimals, and percentages. As his teacher, Kami Thordarson, explains, students don’t normally tackle inverse trig until high school, and sometimes not even then.

But last November, Thordarson began using Khan Academy in her class. Khan Academy is an educational website that, as its tagline puts it, aims to let anyone “learn almost anything—for free.” Students, or anyone interested enough to surf by, can watch some 2,400 videos in which the site’s founder, Salman Khan, chattily discusses principles of math, science, and economics (with a smattering of social science topics thrown in). The videos are decidedly lo-fi, even crude: Generally seven to 14 minutes long, they consist of a voice-over by Khan describing a mathematical concept or explaining how to solve a problem while his hand-scribbled formulas and diagrams appear onscreen. Like the Wizard of Oz, Khan never steps from behind the curtain to appear in a video himself; it’s just Khan’s voice and some scrawly equations. In addition to these videos, the website offers software that generates practice problems and rewards good performance with videogame-like badges—for answering a “streak” of questions correctly, say, or mastering a series of algebra levels. (Carpenter has acquired 52 Earth badges in math, which require hours of toil to attain and at which his classmates gaze with envy and awe.)

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