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Sample syllabus for teaching online Database Modeling and Management
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Students learn the basics of database modeling and managements as well as the analytical techniques and tools used to assess, enhance, and profit from customer-relationship management. The course reviews database technology, organization and planning including technology needs and outsourcing considerations; sampling techniques such as nth selects and frozen files; creating powerful predictor variables such as univariate and cross tabulations, ratios, time series variables, and other measures. The course also covers predicting customer actions by using multiple linear regression and correlation to model response, payment, attrition, churn, and other factors that assist in segmentation. Students also learn how to combine prospect and customer data residing on databases with outside sources of data to drive response models.

Subject:
Business and Communication
Management
Marketing
Material Type:
Syllabus
Provider:
CUNY Academic Works
Provider Set:
City College
Author:
Joshua
Moritz
Date Added:
07/01/2019
Science and Policy of Natural Hazards
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CC BY-NC-SA
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This course examines the science of natural catastrophes such as earthquakes and hurricanes and explores the relationships between the science of and policy toward such hazards. It presents the causes and effects of these phenomena, discusses their predictability, and examines how this knowledge influences policy making. This course includes intensive practice in the writing and presentation of scientific research and summaries for policy makers.

Subject:
Applied Science
Environmental Science
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Homework/Assignment
Lecture Notes
Syllabus
Provider:
MIT
Provider Set:
MIT OpenCourseWare
Date Added:
01/01/2009
A Short Introduction to Critical Data Studies
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Critical Data Studies (CDS) is an interdisciplinary field that addresses the ethical, legal, sociocultural, epistemological and political aspects of data science, big data, and digital infrastructure.

This course focuses on current topics in critical data studies scholarship. Students will develop tools and methods to think critically and engage the public in conversation about data and society.

The overall course and module are designed for asynchronous independent or group learning experiences. Instructors and students are encouraged to use the module as a whole or incorporate individual videos, discussion, writing and/or reading assignments into their course of study as desired.

[Note: The first module is available, and a second module is planned for a future release]

Subject:
Anthropology
Arts and Humanities
Computer Science
Computer, Networking and Telecommunications Systems
Information Science
Mathematics
Measurement and Data
Philosophy
Political Science
Social Science
Statistics and Probability
Material Type:
Homework/Assignment
Lecture
Module
Student Guide
Syllabus
Provider:
Purdue University
Author:
Kendall Roark
Madisson Whitman
Date Added:
04/11/2023
Simmons IPI LIS-532U-OL Scientific Research Data Management
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CC BY
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Simmons University and academic health sciences libraries across the USA are partnering to offer a post-master’s certificate program in the area of Inter-Professional Informationist (IPI), for the purpose of bridging the gap between traditional and emergent skills in health sciences librarianship and increasing the diversity in the workforce. A small cohort of librarians in the program will complete seven IPI courses, and partner institutions will connect them with researchers and clinical leaders who will mentor their capstone. This project was made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services with the Laura Bush 21st Century Librarian Program Grant [RE-17-19-0032-19]. Simmons University, School of Library and Information Science, College of Organizational, Computational and Information Science provides cost-share of the project.

One of the courses included in the IPI program is “Scientific Research Data Management” was taught Fall 2020 by Elaine Martin and Julie Goldman. This course had been an elective in the Simmons School of Library and Information Science curriculum for many years, but underwent a redesign to include and address many of the newer emerging areas related to data services in libraries. For example, the course included “Special Topics” that included Data Curation, Data Skills, Reproducibility, and Informationists. While basic understanding of data management is critical for librarians to work with researchers, there are these emerging areas where librarians can provide even more specialized help to their communities. It is one of the IPI’s project’s goals to bridge the gap between traditional and emergent skills in health sciences librarianship.

This Open Science Framework project site includes curriculum materials for Simmons IPI LIS-532U-OL Scientific Research Data Management (course offered Fall 2020). This course serves as an introduction to the field of scientific data management, and aims to help prepare information professionals and information students for engaging with scientists.

Subject:
Computer, Networking and Telecommunications Systems
Information Science
Mathematics
Measurement and Data
Material Type:
Homework/Assignment
Lecture
Syllabus
Author:
Elaine Martin
Julie Goldman
Date Added:
05/11/2023
Small Business Management
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CC BY
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This course introduces Entrepreneurship and Business Planning. Upon successful completion of this course, students will be able to: analyze the entrepreneurial process through which business ideas are evaluated; identify the characteristics of successful entrepreneurs; demonstrate an awareness of strategies supporting entrepreneurship; distinguish between business ideas and opportunities; write a formalized business plan; write a marketing plan; examine their personal entrepreneurial potentials; know how to finance their business ventures; demonstrate an understanding of team-building dynamics. (Business Administration 305)

Subject:
Business and Communication
Management
Material Type:
Assessment
Full Course
Homework/Assignment
Lecture
Lecture Notes
Reading
Syllabus
Textbook
Provider:
The Saylor Foundation
Date Added:
05/09/2023
Software Engineering
Unrestricted Use
CC BY
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This course presents software engineering concepts and principles in parallel with the software development life cycle. Topics addressed include the Software Development Life Cycle (SDLC), software modeling using Unified Modeling Language (UML), major phases of SDLC (Software Requirements and Analysis, Software Design, and Software Testing), and project management. Upon successful completion of this course, the student will be able to: demonstrate mastery of software engineering knowledge and skills, and professional issues necessary to practice software engineering; discuss principles of software engineering; describe software development life cycle models; learn principles of software modeling through UML as a modeling language; identify major activities and key deliverables in a software development life cycle during software requirements and analysis, software design, and software testing; apply the object-oriented methodology in software engineering to create UML artifacts for software analysis and requirements, software design, and software testing; apply project management concepts in a software engineering environment to manage project, people, and product; participate as an individual and as part of a team to deliver quality software systems. This free course may be completed online at any time. (Computer Science 302)

Subject:
Computer Science
Computer, Networking and Telecommunications Systems
Material Type:
Assessment
Full Course
Homework/Assignment
Reading
Syllabus
Textbook
Provider:
The Saylor Foundation
Date Added:
04/11/2023
Strategic Management (Business 501)
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CC BY
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This course is the capstone of the business major, because it incorporates elements from all of the core courses you should have already completed. Almost every topic should be familiar to you to some degree; however, Strategic Management ties them all together. This course begins with an introduction to the field and the definition of some important terms and concepts. You will then move on to identifying goals and formulating strategies before addressing implementation topics. This course will conclude with strategies for the 21st century. This course should be taken after all core courses have been completed and, ideally, near the end of your completion of the elective courses.

Subject:
Business and Communication
Management
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Full Course
Homework/Assignment
Reading
Syllabus
Provider:
The Saylor Foundation
Date Added:
05/11/2023
Syllabus: Fundamentals of Cybersecurity and Intelligence Gathering
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Syllabus for the course: CIS 356 - Fundamentals of Cybersecurity and Intelligence Gathering. Delivered at Lehman College in Spring 2020 by Fahad Chowdhury as part of the Tech-in-Residence Corps program.

Subject:
Computer Science
Computer, Networking and Telecommunications Systems
Information Science
Material Type:
Syllabus
Provider:
CUNY Academic Works
Provider Set:
Lehman College
Date Added:
04/11/2023
Syllabus:  Special Topics in Advanced Web Development
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Syllabus for the course: CSC 511 - Special Topics in Advanced Web Development. Delivered at the College of Staten Island in Fall 2019 by Shane Afsar as part of the Tech-in-Residence Corps program.

Subject:
Computer Science
Computer, Networking and Telecommunications Systems
Material Type:
Syllabus
Provider:
CUNY Academic Works
Provider Set:
College of Staten Island
Date Added:
04/11/2023
Syllabus for Issues in Law Enforcement: Cybersecurity and Public Interest Technology
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This is a syllabus for a course in Issues in Law Enforcement, a criminal justice course. The curriculum is a public interest technology course in cybersecurity. Principally, the federal government handles cybersecurity investigations along with some state governments and the FBI acts as the center for all cybersecurity complaints.

The course expands beyond law enforcement and provides a comprehensive background to the field through the following presentations: a history of cybersecurity; an explanation of the Internet; an introduction to cybercrime and cybersecurity techniques; the legal environment, which includes a survey of law enforcement and prosecution departments and agencies, and federal and NY state criminal, civil and privacy laws; a case (Silk Road Market) about a darknet market which demonstrates federal law enforcement in action; and the concept that cybersecurity is an enormous challenge to law enforcement.

The course provides two types of student activities:

(i) Service learning project in which students present about how to prevent yourself from being hacked; and

(ii) Group assignments in which students choose and analyze four types of current cybersecurity cases as a team by answering questions posed by the professor which is presented to the class as a whole.

Subject:
Criminal Justice
Hospitality, Tourism and Social Service Careers
Material Type:
Syllabus
Provider:
CUNY Academic Works
Provider Set:
Hostos Community College
Author:
Amy J Ramson
Date Added:
07/12/2020
Teaching Organic Farming & Gardening
Read the Fine Print
Some Rights Reserved
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Over the past 35 years, instructors at the University of California, Santa Cruz have taught organic farming and gardening skills to more than a thousand apprentices through the UCSC Farm & Garden Apprenticeship program. Teaching Organic Farming & Gardening: Resources for Instructors is their 600-page manual and covers practical aspects of organic farming and gardening, applied soil science, and social and environmental issues in agriculture. Units contain lecture outlines for instructors and detailed lecture outlines for students, field and laboratory demonstrations, assessment questions, and annotated resource lists. Although much of the material has been developed for field or garden demonstrations and skill building, most of the units can also be tailored to a classroom setting.



The training manual is designed for a wide audience of those involved in teaching farming and gardening, including colleges and universities with programs in sustainable agriculture, student farms or gardens, and on-farm education programs; urban agriculture, community garden, and farm training programs; farms with internships or apprenticeships; agriculture extension stations; school gardening programs; organizations such as the Peace Corps, US AID, and other groups that provide international training in food growing and ecological growing methods; and master gardener programs.

Subject:
Agriculture
Agriculture and Natural Resources
Business and Communication
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Lecture Notes
Lesson Plan
Syllabus
Provider:
University of California, Santa Cruz
Provider Set:
Individual Authors
Author:
Individual Authors
Date Added:
05/03/2023
Tech Entrepreneurship: An Experiential Journey
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CC BY
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This course uses Lean Launchpad for creating entrepreneurial ventures that start small but can be scaled up fairly quickly. You should you take this class only IF you are interested in creating such ventures. This course provides real world, hands-on learning on what it's like to actually start a high-tech company. This class is not about how to write a business plan. It's not an exercise on how smart you arein a classroom, or how well you use the research library to size markets. This is a practical class essentially a lab, not a theory or "book" class. Our goal, within the constraints of a classroom and a limited amount of time, is to create an entrepreneurial experience for you with all of the pressures and demands of the real world in an early stage start up.

Subject:
Business and Communication
Management
Material Type:
Syllabus
Provider:
CUNY Academic Works
Provider Set:
City College
Author:
Arora, Punit
Date Added:
01/01/2019
Tech Policy and Legal Theory Syllabus
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CC BY-NC
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Technology has changed dramatically over the last couple of decades. Currently, virtually all business industries are powered by large quantities of data. The potential as well as actual uses of business data, which oftentimes includes personal user data, raise complex issues of informed consent and data protection. This course will explore many of these complex issues, with the goal of guiding students into thinking about tech policy from a broad ethical perspective as well as preparing students to responsibly conduct themselves in different areas and industries in a world growingly dominated by technology.

Subject:
Applied Science
Business and Communication
Criminal Justice
Education
Educational Technology
Engineering
Hospitality, Tourism and Social Service Careers
Law
Management
Social Science
Material Type:
Syllabus
Provider:
CUNY Academic Works
Provider Set:
Baruch College
Author:
Lev-Aretz, Yafit
Packin, Nizan
Date Added:
08/15/2020
Visualizing the Middle East: Course Website
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CC BY-NC-ND
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VISUAL CULTURES OF THE MIDDLE EAST MOVING IMAGES FROM DAGUERREOTYPES TO SMARTPHONES:
This course examines changing technologies of image capture/(re)production/circulation in the Middle East from the turn of the century through today. We examine historical moments through an appreciation of changing technological advancements of visual material. From changing printing practices on postcards, consumer grade cameras, increasing photographs in periodicals, TVs & VHS, leading up to networked technologies and the digital morass in which we now live. Across the course, emergent technological capabilities of visuality become entwined in issues of nationalism, revolt, consumerism, tourism, changing gender roles, and boundaries of sexuality.
The second half of the course focuses on the contemporary landscape of smartphones/internet/apps/digitality and the dizzying array of visual material in which we now drown. From protests to citizen journalists, emergent political movements and social media on smartphones, from Grindr to surveillance, selfies, & sex.
Finally, there is an emphasis for students to develop and integrate visual material in their developing research agendas. We will explore some visual methods across the course and you will learn how to create a digital story paying special attention to not simply using visual material as the "representation" of your argument.

Subject:
Anthropology
Social Science
Visual Arts
Visual Arts and Design
Material Type:
Activity/Lab
Full Course
Syllabus
Date Added:
04/07/2023
Web-based Website Design Reading and Resource List and Course Schedule
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CC BY-NC-SA
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Web-based Website Design Reading and Resource List and Course Schedule

CSE 629 Web-based Website Design

Students will create a professional, business,
or education related website using free webbased software, widgets, and training. Course
emphasizes learning by doing and following
best practices for creating user-friendly web
sites. Designed to train and develop web design
skills as well as develop the ability to work
with and employ free, online tools. By closely
learning one system, students can apply that
knowledge and easily integrate with other
systems available online.

Subject:
Computer Science
Computer, Networking and Telecommunications Systems
Material Type:
Student Guide
Syllabus
Teaching/Learning Strategy
Date Added:
04/11/2023