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Read more at: Creative writing: an introduction to writing for children

Creative writing: an introduction to writing for children

Short description: 

Children are a wonderful audience for stories. They are open to new ideas, and honest in their appreciation or criticism of them. If a child loves a book they will want it over and over again until it becomes almost a part of them, remembered forever. Children's books come in a range of formats for different ages and stages. In some, text shares the stage with pictures, in some text stands alone. It's a complex world, but a fascinating one. This course introduces stories for babies, for early readers, for middle grade and young adults, and challenges participants to have a go at them all, to discuss and share and develop their own ideas.

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Type ref: 
Course code: 
2324NOE061
Start date: 
Thursday, 22 February, 2024 - 00:00 to Sunday, 7 April, 2024 - 01:00
Apply by: 
Thursday, 22 February, 2024 - 00:00
Course tutor id: 
8312
Course ID: 
30969
Tuition fee: 
£395
Course programme: 
Online Courses
Duration description: 
7 Weeks
Non-accredited
0
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0
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0
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0
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0
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0
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Maximum places: 
15
Booked places: 
9
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Course information
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Aims of the course:

  1. To explore the range of fiction and book formats for different ages and stages of childhood.
  2. To show how to shape and write stories, sometimes to work with illustration.
  3. To allow participants to develop an understanding of the market, and how to pursue publication.

Learning outcomes

As a result of the course, within the constraints of the time available, students should be able to:

  1. understand what a story is, and how it works;
  2. appreciate why different stories and styles suit different stages of childhood and book format;
  3. make an informed attempt at writing for children of different ages;
  4. understand what is involved in getting a story published.

 

Course content overview:

  • This course will consider children of different ages and stages, and the books suited to them.
  • An understanding of story will be developed, considering character, plot and writing voice appropriate to the young audience and readership.
  • Information will be given in targeting different potential publication openings.

Schedule (this course is completed entirely online):

Orientation Week: 19-25 February 2024

By studying this week the students should have:

  • become familiar with navigating around the VLE and from VLE to links and back;
  • tested their ability to access files and the web conferencing software and sorted out any problems with the help of the eLearning Helpdesk;
  • learnt how to look for, assess and reference internet resources;
  • contributed to a discussion forum to introduce themselves to other students and discuss why they are interested in the course, what they hope to get out of their studies and also to respond to News item sent out by tutor.

Teaching Weeks: 26 February-31 March 2024

Week 1 What’s the story?

Purpose: To explore what a story is and how to shape one. By studying this week the students should have an understanding of the necessary structure of story.

Week 2 Character and plot

Purpose: To show how character and plot are intertwined to achieve story. By studying this week the students should have:

  • an understanding of how character powers plot;
  • the tools with which to create character through words;
  • the experience of writing a story opening that establishes character and sets a plot in motion.

Week 3 Voice

Purpose: To explore how different writing treatments can achieve different effects.  Narrative voice, first person, use of dialogue, letters and diary entries. By studying this week the students should have:

  • an understanding of different writing styles, and the effect those different styles can create;
  • experience in trying some of those different styles;
  • experience in assessing those styles, when written by others.

Week 4 Words in partnership with illustration and design

Purpose: To show how pictures showing story can work together with words telling or animating a story.  To demonstrate how book design can present story to dramatic effect. By studying this week the students should have:

  • an appreciation of how words and pictures can work together to communicate story in picture book form;
  • an experience of writing with illustration in mind.

Week 5 Aiming for publication

Purpose: To introduce the complex world of children’s book publication, highlight potential openings, and teach how best to approach publication. By studying this week the students should have:

  • an understanding of the markets for children’s books;
  • an understanding of the different requirements from publishers aiming different formats of books for different ages of children and different markets;
  • knowledge about how best to approach publication

Feedback Week: 1-7 April 2024

Each week of an online course is roughly equivalent to 2-3 hours of classroom time. On top of this, participants should expect to spend roughly 2-3 hours reading material, etc., although this will vary from person to person.

While they have a specific start and end date and will follow a weekly schedule (for example, week 1 will cover topic A, week 2 will cover topic B), our tutor-led online courses are designed to be flexible and as such would normally not require participants to be online for a specific day of the week or time of the day (although some tutors may try to schedule times where participants can be online together for web seminars, which will be recorded so that those who are unable to be online at certain times are able to access material).

Unless otherwise stated, all course material will be posted on the Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) so that they can be accessed at any time throughout the duration of the course and interaction with your tutor and fellow participants will take place through a variety of different ways which will allow for both synchronous and asynchronous learning (discussion boards,etc).

Certificate of Participation

A Certificate of Participation will be awarded to participants who contribute constructively to weekly discussions and exercises/assignments for the duration of the course.

What our students say

"Pippa's weekly feedback was excellent. So thorough and considered. She was very honest and constructive which is much appreciated. Her insider knowledge is so interesting and useful. I think most of all she seemed genuinely invested in our development."

“The course content exceeded my expectations. It managed to cover a lot of detail about how to write and what makes a good story, as well as more practical matters.”

“I enjoyed the challenges and they were pitched at the beginner level which suited me well."

“Every week I found myself challenged and encouraged with insightful information, exercises and feedback.”

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Entry requirements
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This course is open to everyone, and you don’t need any previous knowledge or experience of the subject to attend.

 

Our online courses are designed especially for adult learners who want to advance their personal or professional development. They are taught by tutors who are expert in both their subjects and in teaching students of all ages and experiences.

 

Given the nature of creative writing, it is important that students' use of English is sufficiently fluent to be able to understand in English nuances of meaning and have a familiarity with the structure and grammar of English. Please note that all teaching is in English. You should have near-native command of the English language in order to get the maximum benefit from the course.

For information on bursaries for this course, please see http://www.ice.cam.ac.uk/info/bursaries

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Canonical Course ID: 
31241

Read more at: The neuropsychology of decision making

The neuropsychology of decision making

Type ref: 
Course code: 
2324NOE062
Start date: 
Monday, 19 February, 2024 - 00:00 to Sunday, 7 April, 2024 - 01:00
Apply by: 
Monday, 19 February, 2024 - 00:00
Course tutor id: 
9696
Course ID: 
30970
Tuition fee: 
£305
Course programme: 
Online Courses
Duration description: 
7 Weeks
Non-accredited
0
Course photo: 
City or Town: 
Postcode: 
Single capacity: 
0
Double capacity: 
0
Twin capacity: 
0
Single usage: 
0
Double usage: 
0
Twin usage: 
0
Maximum places: 
20
Booked places: 
19
Course cancelled: 
false
course status ref: 
booking destination ref: 
Tutor role ref: 
Tutor
Study mode ref: 
tab1name: 
Overview
tab1html: 

Aims of the course

  • To gain an understanding of the brain structures involved in decision-making and how they develop.
  • To gain an understanding of the neural mechanisms of decision-making processes and how these are influenced.
  • To gain an understanding of decision-making deficits and their role in psychological disorders.

Target audience

Marketing & consumer psychology specialists wanting an improved understanding of what influences consumers decision-making behaviour, how different populations and demographics are likely to make decisions and how the decision-making process can be advantageous in marketing strategies.

Child development specialists, childcare, early years education practitioners looking for an improved understanding of the implications of early experiences, shaping early years education and experiences.

Psychology and mental health professionals for children (counsellors, social workers, CAMHS) looking for an improved understanding of the neurological and psychological impact of early experiences and the importance of experiences in key developmental periods.

Psychology and mental health professionals for adults (counsellors, prison service, mental health care) looking for an improved understanding of the possible roles of early experiences in behaviours exhibited in adulthood. Specifically, in terms of psychological disorders associated with decision making deficits. Improving understanding of the underlying neurological processes of decision-making, driving external behaviours.

Learning outcomes

  • Identify the key anatomical and physiological components of decision making from a neuropsychological perspective
  • Explain decision-making development in terms of executive function, the role of the prefrontal cortex and influences on development
  • Outline decision-making deficits and roles of decision-making in psychological disorders

Schedule (this course is completed entirely online)

Orientation Week: 19-25 February 2024

Teaching Weeks: 26 February-31 March 2024

Feedback Week: 1-7 April 2024

Teaching week 1 - Introduction to neuroanatomy & neurodevelopment

This week will provide participants with a basic understanding of anatomy and development, providing an important basis for the following weeks. This week will not have a specific focus on decision making, but provides students with a basic knowledge that will be needed to be able to understand the later content on decision making.

Learning outcomes:

  • Develop an understanding of basic brain anatomy
  • Develop a basic understanding of how the human brain develops

Teaching week 2 - The importance of the prefrontal cortex

This week will provide participants with an understanding of what the prefrontal cortex is and how it is involved in high order processes, specifically decision making. Participants will gain a general understanding of what makes the prefrontal cortex unique in terms of structure and function. This week will cover research evidence surrounding the involvement of the prefrontal cortex in various aspects of decision making.

Learning outcomes:

  • Develop an understanding of what the human prefrontal cortex is and why it is important in decision making

Teaching week 3 - Neurotransmitters, Neurophysiology and decision networks

This week will build upon the anatomical and physiological knowledge developed so far, gaining a more complex understanding of how decisions are made. Participants will learn about the neurotransmitters involved in a decision and how they 'act' in terms of physiology. Participants will also learn about brain connectivity, specifically research evidence surrounding the specific connections and networks involved in decision making.

Learning outcomes:

  • Building on previous learning to develop a more in depth understanding of the decision making process from a neurophysiological perspective.
  • To begin to build an understanding of the brain networks involved in decisions.

Teaching week 4 - Decision making styles & the role of childhood experiences in decision-making

This week puts the previous weeks learning into an applied context, exploring decision making and development of decision making as a dynamic process. Specifically, there will be a focus on differences in decision making style exhibited in adulthood and factors in childhood that can affect the development of decision making.

Learning outcomes:

  • To be able to put their previous learning into context.
  • To build on basic neuroanatomical and physiological understanding from previous weeks, to explore the development of decision making in more detail.
  • To develop a further understanding of decision making and what influences it.

Teaching week 5 - Decision making deficits

This week brings together everything covered in teaching weeks 1-4 in terms of neurotypical decision making, to explore deficits in decision making, such as that seen in schizophrenia. The content this week will cover observed decision-making deficits, research evidence suggesting underlying biological causes and the roles of external factors e.g. in childhood.

Learning outcomes:

  • To build on previous knowledge of neurotypical decision making to gain an understanding of how decision making deficits contribute to psychological disorders and how they manifest.

Each week of an online course is roughly equivalent to 2-3 hours of classroom time. On top of this, participants should expect to spend roughly 2-3 hours reading material, etc., although this will vary from person to person.

While they have a specific start and end date and will follow a weekly schedule (for example, week 1 will cover topic A, week 2 will cover topic B), our tutor-led online courses are designed to be flexible and as such would normally not require participants to be online for a specific day of the week or time of the day (although some tutors may try to schedule times where participants can be online together for web seminars, which will be recorded so that those who are unable to be online at certain times are able to access material).

Virtual Learning Environment

Unless otherwise stated, all course material will be posted on the Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) so that they can be accessed at any time throughout the duration of the course and interaction with your tutor and fellow participants will take place through a variety of different ways which will allow for both synchronous and asynchronous learning (discussion boards etc).

Certificate of participation

A Certificate of Participation will be awarded to participants who contribute constructively to weekly discussions and exercises/assignments for the duration of the course.

What our students say:

"Clear and concise, and I loved the fact that the sessions are divided into bite sized learning making it easier to capture the information and study based on our availability."

"The papers were excellent, and the discussion topics really stimulating."

"Show how practicing self-control can lead to improvements in decision-making."

"Thorough, knowledgeable, interactive, helpful. Thank you!"

"The tutor was engaged and provided feedback in the discussions."

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Requirements
tab2html: 

Entry requirements

This course is open to everyone, and you don’t need any previous knowledge or experience of the subject to attend.

Our short courses are designed especially for adult learners who want to advance their personal or professional development. They are taught by tutors who are expert in both their subjects and in teaching students of all ages and experiences.

Please note that all teaching is in English. You should have near-native command of the English language in order to get the maximum benefit from the course.

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Fees & bursaries
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Fees

The course fee includes access to the course on our Virtual Learning Environment (VLE), personal feedback on your work from an expert tutor, a Certification of Participation (if you complete work and take part in discussions), and access to the class resources for two years after your course finishes.

VAT does not apply to course fees and there is no service charge (gratuities to domestic staff are left to your discretion).

Bursaries

The Cambridge University Press (CUP) Bursary Fund offers a bursary of 50% of the course fee to applicants who teach in a UK state school or state-funded further education institution, applying to study a day school, weekend course or online course.

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Canonical Course ID: 
31317

Read more at: Introduction to Cognitive Psychology and Neuropsychology

Introduction to Cognitive Psychology and Neuropsychology

Subject ref: 
Type ref: 
Course code: 
2324NOE060
Start date: 
Monday, 19 February, 2024 - 00:00 to Sunday, 7 April, 2024 - 01:00
Apply by: 
Monday, 19 February, 2024 - 00:00
Course tutor id: 
9688
Course ID: 
30968
Tuition fee: 
£305
Course programme: 
Online Courses
Duration description: 
7 Weeks
Non-accredited
0
Course photo: 
City or Town: 
Postcode: 
Single capacity: 
0
Double capacity: 
0
Twin capacity: 
0
Single usage: 
0
Double usage: 
0
Twin usage: 
0
Maximum places: 
20
Booked places: 
20
Course cancelled: 
false
course status ref: 
booking destination ref: 
Tutor role ref: 
Tutor
Study mode ref: 
tab1name: 
Overview
tab1html: 

Aims of the course

  • To introduce participants to the history and key debates in psychology and neuropsychology, exploring the main different cognitive functions and how they interact with one another.
  • To learn the key techniques and methods to study the mind.
  • To introduce participants to the main theories, models, and concepts of attention, memory, language, perception, and emotional processing.

Target audience

Anyone with an interest in psychology. This course will touch on the fundamental theories, models, and methods of cognitive psychology with a specific focus on the different functions (attention, memory, language, language, perception, and emotional processing).

Course content overview

Psychology is the study of how we feel, see, hear, speak, learn and narrate our story in the world. Cognitive psychologists primarily focus on how our mind works and how it develops from the moment we are born and during childhood to reach its full capability. 

This course is intended for anyone with an interest in psychology and it does not require any previous expertise or knowledge of psychology. We will explore the key ideas, models, and findings of the main cognitive functions, including memory, language, attention, and perception. 

The course will also provide insights into the core research methods used to study the mind, brain, and behaviour (from behavioural experiments, to the study of patients with brain damage and the use of neuroimaging techniques). In doing so, participants will learn about the main methods and materials used to explore human feelings, sensations and thinking, as well as the way humans learn and interact with their own selves and others.

This course will give students an understanding of the historical development of modern psychology, a familiarity with what we now know about our own mind-body system through  an exciting journey inside our mind and how it evolves throughout our lives with the help of brain plasticity.

Schedule (this course is completed entirely online)

Orientation Week: 19-25 February 2024

Teaching Weeks: 26 February-31 March 2024

Feedback Week: 1-7 April 2024

Teaching week 1 - What is Cognitive Psychology? History and current core debates

This week will give an overview of the main ideas that underlie modern research in psychology. Content will explore key debates such as the nature and nurture discussion and their role in forming personality and behaviour; the relationship between brain, mind and behaviour and the extent to which the mind-body system can be observed and investigated scientifically; the extent of plasticity in the adult brain; and the extent to which the mind can be conceived in a modular way, with different functions regulated by different neural paths. This will stimulate a critical understanding of psychology in a broad way and of the principles at the heart of its research.

Learning outcomes

  • To learn about the key findings and assumptions of cognitive psychology;
  • To get familiar with some of the central debates in cognitive psychology
  • To understand the relationship between the mind and the brain, as well as the role of genes and experience in shaping human behaviour.

Teaching week 2 - How do we measure the mind? Introduction to psychology's main research methods

This week explores the key research methods of psychology. It will outline the most important techniques at the heart of cognitive psychology and evaluate the contribution they can make to what we now know about the mind and its development. Content will introduce the role of neuropsychological research in understanding how brain lesions can help us understand how the brain normally functions. A review of the key neuroimaging techniques will be given, including magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), positron emotion tomography (PET), electroencephalogram (EEG), magnetoencephalography (MEG) and single cell recordings. The podcast will also consider techniques for actively manipulating neural activity (e.g. transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS).

Learning outcomes

  • To understand the main methods in cognitive psychology.
  • To learn about neuroimaging techniques and neuropsychological findings and how they contribute to our knowledge of the human brain.
  • To develop a critical approach to methods and how each of them helps answer specific research questions.

Teaching week 3 - Introduction to the psychology of human language

This week provides an introduction to the study of language and to the core aspects of language processing. Particular focus will be given to how we learn language and whether we have an innate predisposition to language acquisition. Content will provide an overview of the main theories of language acquisition and the nature of the learning context, discussing the theory of shared attentional orienting (between the parent and the infant) during language development. Lectures will also provide an overview of the different components of language from phonology and morphology to semantics and syntax.

Learning outcomes

  • To learn the main theories and models related to human language acquisition and to critically evaluate the extent to which empirical studies support different theoretical claims.
  • To understand the main models accounting for the development of the different components of language.
  • To develop a critical approach to theories highlighting the crucial role of the learning context during language acquisition (shared attentional orienting).

Teaching week 4 - Introduction to memory, perception, and cross-modal interactions

This week will introduce the concepts of working memory and the most influential models theorised to explain its role. We will also explore evidences for the idea of a ‘phonological loop’ and ‘visuo-spatial’ sketchpad for short term memory. Content will also highlight how language and memory interact with perception to facilitate some aspects of our daily life. In particular, cross-modal effects will be explored, that is how one sensory system (for example what we see) can influence another sense (what we hear); or how perception and language have an influence on each other (such as how language influence how we see colours); or how perception influences memorization.

Learning outcomes

  • To learn the main ideas and models of working memory and its role in relation with short- and long-term memory. 
  • To understand how language and memory interact with perception to facilitate some aspects of our daily life.
  • To develop a critical approach to the modular understanding of the mind and appreciate how sensory modalities greatly influence each other.  

Teaching week 5 - Introduction to attention, consciousness, and free will

This week will explore the idea of attention and the idea that our experience is shaped by what we focus on. In particular, this week will be dedicated to the influence of attention in our mind’s life and on how our internal and external landscape is designed by our attention (such as the role of attention on memory, language and perception). Videos will also discuss cases of impaired attention and the symptoms it causes (such as the visual spatial neglect). Finally, the session will also provide an overview of the relationship between attention and consciousness, of their co-dependency as well as dissociation. Content will also be dedicated to the relationship between consciousness and free will.

Learning outcomes

  • To learn the psychological concept of attention and how it shapes thinking.
  • To understand the contribution of neuropsychology to our understanding of human attention. 
  • To develop a critical approach to the literature on the relationship between attention and consciousness.

Each week of an online course is roughly equivalent to 2-3 hours of classroom time. On top of this, participants should expect to spend roughly 2-3 hours reading material, etc., although this will vary from person to person.

While they have a specific start and end date and will follow a weekly schedule (for example, week 1 will cover topic A, week 2 will cover topic B), our tutor-led online courses are designed to be flexible and as such would normally not require participants to be online for a specific day of the week or time of the day (although some tutors may try to schedule times where participants can be online together for web seminars, which will be recorded so that those who are unable to be online at certain times are able to access material).

Virtual Learning Environment

Unless otherwise stated, all course material will be posted on the Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) so that they can be accessed at any time throughout the duration of the course and interaction with your tutor and fellow participants will take place through a variety of different ways which will allow for both synchronous and asynchronous learning (discussion boards etc).

Certificate of participation

A Certificate of Participation will be awarded to participants who contribute constructively to weekly discussions and exercises/assignments for the duration of the course.

What our students say

"This course offered a variety of fascinating insights into cognitive and neuropsychology. It is amazing how much science has discovered and how much still is to uncover. Comparing evolving theories and receiving glimpses of ongoing debates was very enriching to me."

"Dr Mangiaracina has a very effective way of explaining complex topics and making them accessible to laymen. The course was well structured to allow a high level understanding of neuropsychology and cognitive psychology."

"I like the way Dr. Giulia Mangiaracina presents the course very much. And I also appreciate the clear explanations and perfect preparation of materials which make it easier for me to understand this new stuff better. I´ve already attended one course of Dr. Mangiaracina before and I chose this one partly because of the fact, Dr. Mangiaracina is the tutor. I find her really very good."

tab2name: 
Requirements
tab2html: 

Entry requirements

This course is open to everyone, and you don’t need any previous knowledge or experience of the subject to attend.

Our short courses are designed especially for adult learners who want to advance their personal or professional development. They are taught by tutors who are expert in both their subjects and in teaching students of all ages and experiences.

Please note that all teaching is in English. You should have near-native command of the English language in order to get the maximum benefit from the course.

tab3name: 
Fees & bursaries
tab3html: 

Fees

The course fee includes access to the course on our Virtual Learning Environment (VLE), personal feedback on your work from an expert tutor, a Certification of Participation (if you complete work and take part in discussions), and access to the class resources for two years after your course finishes.

VAT does not apply to course fees and there is no service charge (gratuities to domestic staff are left to your discretion).

Bursaries

The Cambridge University Press (CUP) Bursary Fund offers a bursary of 50% of the course fee to applicants who teach in a UK state school or state-funded further education institution, applying to study a day school, weekend course or online course.

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2
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Course Image version: 
2
Study level ref: 
Canonical Course ID: 
31236

Read more at: Julius Caesar: a life

Julius Caesar: a life

Short description: 

History abounds in heroes and villains. Fewer are those who have been both simultaneously. And of these few, none are more controversial than Julius Caesar. From his adolescence to his death and on to the present day Julius Caesar has been denounced as much as he has been lauded.

Was he an adventurer, a womaniser, and the militarist who replaced a Republic with a dictatorship? Yes. Was he a reformer, a polymath, and the man who threw out a corrupt clique to establish a government which actually served the people? Again, yes.

Julius Caesar is also one of the few people of ancient history who speaks to us in his own words. His clear campaign notes, written in spare, elegant Latin are in fact masterly works of self-promoting propaganda.

This course examines Julius Caesar, the man and the myth. It looks at the times that made the man, and describes the contemporary political situation as well as Caesar's extraordinary career. Along the way we meet other well-known personages such as Cato, Cicero and Cleopatra who were all Caesar's contemporaries.

Subject ref: 
Type ref: 
Course code: 
2324NOE064
Start date: 
Thursday, 22 February, 2024 - 00:00 to Sunday, 7 April, 2024 - 01:00
Apply by: 
Thursday, 22 February, 2024 - 00:00
Course tutor id: 
1376
Course ID: 
30972
Tuition fee: 
£305
Course programme: 
Online Courses
Duration description: 
7 Weeks
Non-accredited
0
Course photo: 
City or Town: 
Postcode: 
Single capacity: 
0
Double capacity: 
0
Twin capacity: 
0
Single usage: 
0
Double usage: 
0
Twin usage: 
0
Maximum places: 
20
Booked places: 
8
Course cancelled: 
false
course status ref: 
booking destination ref: 
Tutor role ref: 
Tutor
Study mode ref: 
tab1name: 
Course information
tab1html: 

Aims of the course:

  1. To describe the life and times of Julius Caesar.
  2. To examine the role of the army in Roman politics.
  3. To compare a dictatorship with dysfunctional democracy.

Course content overview:

This course will describe the life of ancient Rome's most controversial character and look at some of the issues related to his overthrow of the Roman Republic. It will examine both what drove Caesar to seize power and the social and political conditions which allowed him to do so. 

Schedule (this course is completed entirely online):

Orientation Week: 19-25 February 2024

Teaching Weeks: 26 February-31 March 2024

Feedback Week: 1-7 April 2024

Teach Week 1: Troubled times

  • Understanding the Late Republican Roman and Caesar's formative years

Teaching Week 2: Climbing the ladder

  • Understanding Late Republican Roman politics
  • A look at the main sources for this era
  • How to locate history resources on the internet

Teaching Week 3: The Gallic Wars

  • A look at the Republican Roman army
  • Understanding the formative Roman Empire in strategic, political and economic terms

Teaching Week 4: The Civil War

  • A look at why Rome became a military dictatorship
  • Understanding 'client kings' 
  • A look at the wider idea of how democratic governments can collapse
  • Reviewing the Roman army's role in politics

Teaching Week 5: Caesar the dictator

  • A look at Caesar's later life
  • Examining different approaches to history, and how perceptions of history affect later events

Each week of an online course is roughly equivalent to 2-3 hours of classroom time. On top of this, participants should expect to spend roughly 2-3 hours reading material, etc., although this will vary from person to person.

While they have a specific start and end date and will follow a weekly schedule (for example, week 1 will cover topic A, week 2 will cover topic B), our tutor-led online courses are designed to be flexible and as such would normally not require participants to be online for a specific day of the week or time of the day (although some tutors may try to schedule times where participants can be online together for web seminars, which will be recorded so that those who are unable to be online at certain times are able to access material).

Unless otherwise stated, all course material will be posted on the Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) so that they can be accessed at any time throughout the duration of the course and interaction with your tutor and fellow participants will take place through a variety of different ways which will allow for both synchronous and asynchronous learning (discussion boards,etc).

Certificate of Participation

A Certificate of Participation will be awarded to participants who contribute constructively to weekly discussions and exercises/assignments for the duration of the course.

What our students say

'Everything about the course: the online lectures, the required and recommended readings, and the online seminars exceeded my expectations.'

'Each time I do one of Maty's courses I am amazed at how it is so much better than I expected.'

'The depth with which we were able to discuss Caesar and those around him made for fascinating discussion.'

'I was very pleased with the course. I liked the packaging into bite-sized chunks of presentation material. The forums and seminars were good for consolidating what one had learned.'

tab2name: 
Entry requirements
tab2html: 

This course is open to everyone, and you don’t need any previous knowledge or experience of the subject to attend.

Our short courses are designed especially for adult learners who want to advance their personal or professional development. They are taught by tutors who are expert in both their subjects and in teaching students of all ages and experiences.

Please note that all teaching is in English. You should have near-native command of the English language in order to get the maximum benefit from the course.

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1
tab2order: 
2
Course Image version: 
2
Study level ref: 

Read more at: An introduction to astronomy: exploring the wonders of our Universe

An introduction to astronomy: exploring the wonders of our Universe

Short description: 

Assuming no prior knowledge, as celestial travellers we'll obtain a step-by-step overview of this corner of our amazing cosmos, through the full-spectrum eyes of our present golden era of astronomy, as evidenced by 2019s first ever image of a black hole and the Hubble image of a quarter of a million galaxies at every stage of evolution back to 500 million years after the Big Bang. We shall undertake a grand tour, starting outwards from our favourite star, passing the asteroids and planets, explored by many great missions, such as Cassini–Huygens, that compose, possibly a unique, solar system and taking us to the edge of our island universe, the Milky Way, taking in all manner of cosmic wonders along the way. We shall consider the likelihood of finding life beyond the Earth, both in our own planetary system, and amongst the present torrent of exoplanet discoveries, currently standing at about 4000 exoplanets. The journey will continue into the wider stellar neighbourhood, partaking in vistas that include the gentle birth of stars to their cataclysmic demise, possibly as supernovas, leaving behind gently expanding beautiful remnants, like the Crab, in an endless recycling of material. However, without such violence we might not be here to witness it. Perhaps we shall be guided by the beams of light provided by the lighthouses of the universe, the super-dense pulsars, generated from their  dizzying rotations. No doubt we shall witness the most violent of all events, the birth scream of black holes, as subtly detected, now almost weekly, by gravitational wave detectors. And, thanks to missions like Gaia, we now observe our galaxy growing and evolving as it cannibalizes smaller galaxies, in a fashion eerily similar to that of the monster lying at its heart, a supermassive black hole.

Subject ref: 
Type ref: 
Course code: 
2324NOE073
Start date: 
Monday, 8 April, 2024 - 01:00 to Sunday, 26 May, 2024 - 01:00
Apply by: 
Sunday, 7 April, 2024 - 01:00
Course tutor id: 
3532
Course ID: 
30973
Tuition fee: 
£305
Course programme: 
Online Courses
Duration description: 
7 Weeks
Non-accredited
0
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14
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Overview
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Aims of the course

  • To provide a full structure and understanding to your learning in this subject, through a framework that gives a clear and comprehensive understanding of the relative sizes of objects and their relationship to one another.
  • A review of the structures found in the universe, from planets, stars and galaxies, to the cosmic web, resulting in an understanding of our place, relationship to, and a sense of scale to the cosmos we inhabit.
  • A provide a framework, in this present golden era of astronomy, within which you may better understand the science of astronomy encountered on multimedia, and to place into context the importance of new discoveries.
  • To help you take full advantage of on-line resources, such as YouTube astronomy channels, audio-books and astronomy books aimed at the general public.
  • To encourage you to attend astronomical observing opportunities, and consider undertaking additional astronomy courses elsewhere.

Course content overview

In this introductory course, in order to give full justice to the cosmic wonders that surround you, we shall view the components of our island universe, the Milky Way, starting outwards from our favourite star, passing the asteroids and planets of our small corner of the Universe, and beyond into the wider stellar neighbourhood. Taking in cosmic wonders of our Galaxy along the way, from the gentle birth of stars to their cataclysmic demise, the dizzying rotations of super-dense pulsars, to the most violent of all events as we witness the birth scream of black holes. 

Schedule (this course is completed entirely online)

Orientation Week: 8-14 April 2024

Teaching Weeks: 15 April-19-May 2024

Feedback Week: 20-26 May 2024

 

Week 0 - Preparing to study this course

Purpose/Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

•Become familiar with navigating around the VLE and from VLE to links and back

•Tested their ability to access files and the web conferencing software and sorted out any problems with the help of the eLearning Helpdesk

•Learnt how to look for, assess and reference internet resources

•Used forums to introduce themselves to other students

•Contributed to a discussion forum to introduce themselves to other students and discuss why they are interested in the course, what they hope to get out of their studies and also to respond to news item sent out on behalf of tutor

Week 1 - The solar system - the search for life

Purpose: Our solar system may be unique, both in its configuration and as a source of life. We shall study the configuration of our own solar system, to better understand those around other stars, and understand what makes our planet such a hospitable place for life. We will focus on our attempts to search for life within this system, which if chemically different from ours, then we'd know it evolved independently from us, and most importantly, we'd know life had begun more than once.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

•Deeper understanding of the quickly evolving field of planetary science, not just of those with worlds within our own planetary system, but the rapidly increasing number around other stars.

•An overview of the current state of knowledge regarding each planet within the solar system, using the latest observations from such missions as Cassini–Huygens or New Horizons, in regards to their behaviour, properties and motions, in particular their geophysical  history.

•Explored the full extent of the solar system from Mercury to the Oort cloud, defining its outer limits, and understand the origin and evolution of our planetary system.

•Met the concept of gravitational bending and the first major test of the theory of general relativity.

•Understood the meaning of habitable worlds, the search for liquid water and hence why the most likely places to find life in the solar system include Europa (Jupiter) and Enceladus (Saturn).

•Understood why Mars has proved so fascinating in our search for life, as it may have harboured life in a long lost congenial past.

•From a sense of scale of our solar system come to appreciate both the difficulties in traversing and colonising the solar system, and why the Earth is so special.

Week 2 - Exoplanets

Purpose: It has been compared with looking for a firefly next to a searchlight, but we shall study the detection methods used to look for exoplanets,  which only existed in hypothesis until 1992, of which we now know that our galaxy is likely to contain trillions. However, exoplanetary solar systems look nothing like our own, and this had an impact on our planetary systems formation models. We will also outline our continued search for life in these systems and the efforts to directly image them.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

•Understood when and how, using both the radial velocity and transit methods, exoplanets were discovered, leading to the present torrent of new discoveries, currently standing around about 4000 exoplanets.

•Discussed the habitability of recently discovered exoplanets, in particular those around red dwarf stars.

•Comparing other planetary systems with our own, and understanding the apparent uniqueness of our own solar system, which has altered our understanding of how its present structure originated.

•Reviewed the search for life in other solar systems as we observe exoplanet atmospheres, and the current efforts to undertake the difficult task of directly imaging exoplanets.

•Understood the importance of the latest mission, such as TESS, locating planets close to home for easier study and in particular whether their surfaces are hospitable for life, and future missions, such as JWT, to study planetary atmospheres.

 

Week 3 - Stars

Purpose: Our galaxy is full of stars of many sizes and colours, such that stars span a range about a factor of a thousand in mass, a factor of a million in size, and a factor of a billion in power. The Sun is one such star, providing the closest laboratory for studying a star, from which we can understand how stars actually shine. With this understanding we'll see how stars are born and die, such that 97% of all stars end their existence as white-dwarfs, while for the massive stars, dying in the blaze of glory of a supernova, is more the exception.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

•Understood the properties of our nearest star, the Sun, to comprehend its very dynamic and active nature, through recent missions such as SDO and Parker, and its effect on surrounding planets through the energetic solar wind and flares.

•Learned from stellar observations how we discerned the source of energy in stars, the nuclear fusion process and our attempts to replicate it, with all its associated difficulties, here on Earth.

•Comprehended the current state of hydrostatic equilibrium in which our sun exists, and its implications for its future history.

•Analysed the H-R diagram of luminosity against temperature from observations of many different stars, and learned how this led to a full understanding of the evolutionary history of stars through their life-cycle from birth to death.

•Followed the birth of a proto-star in a stellar nursery, linked this to evolving fusion history of the star and its eventual fate based on the mass of the star itself.

•Applied this understanding to the future history of our own Sun, and the consequences for our own planet, the Earth.

•Become aware that the end for the vast majority stars, including our Sun, is the white dwarf stage, while for the remaining few that meet cataclysmic ends, this includes such dangerous outcomes as supernova and black holes.

•Discussed the differences between nova, supernova and hypernova.

•Comprehended the importance of supernovas to life in the universe, and how without them we would not be here.

 

Week 4 - Milky Way

Purpose: We'll investigate the size, structure and constituent parts of our island universe, the Milky Way, and see how we determine both the Sun's galactic location and the galaxies spiral nature, while located deeply within it. Then we'll look at the sleeping monster at its heart, found possibly in all galaxies, located at the galactic centre, Sagittarius A star, and its recent attempt to grab a meal. By creating an accurate 3D-map of our quadrant of the Galaxy, allows us to study its history and evolution. We'll conclude with a look at this current period, the Age of Stars, a season for life due to the abundant stellar heat and light, which now appears to be in its very latter stages.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

•Covered the structure and properties of the Milky Way, such as its size and shape, and how that changes when observed in a variety of different wavelengths.

•Comprehended the relative importance of various components that make up our galaxy, from dark matter, that forms the halo within which the visible galaxy is embedded, to stars that compose the disk and halo, gas, from which stars are formed, and dust which obscures our view through the galaxy itself. 

•Looked at how we determine size and shape of the Milky Way from our position with it, through the observations of globular clusters that orbit the centre of our galaxy, and the emissions of gas that reveal its distribution in the form of arms.

•Considered the different populations of stars within the galaxy, the zone of obscuration which limits our view of the heart of our galaxy, and the giant molecular clouds which are the birth sites of stars.

•Understood how observations of centre of our galaxy have revealed the hidden supermassive black hole (SMBH) at the heart of the galaxy, similar to that possibly in all galaxies, and its close relationship with the evolutionary history of our galaxy despite the vast discrepancy in size between the two.

•Covered the relatively recent attempt by the SMBH to eat a nearby passing gas cloud, and the attempt to directly image it using the Event Horizon Telescope.

•Learned how we are making a 3-D map or our galaxy quadrant, deciphering its evolutionary history through the Gaia mission, as the galaxy has grown by cannibalizing other smaller galaxies over time, and improving the accuracy of the HR diagram, and hence our understanding of the evolution of stars.

•Understand that the present age of stars, the present phase in the evolutionary life of the universe, and how it’s coming to end, and its implications for the future history of life.

 

Week 5 - Dark Matter

Purpose: 85% of all matter in the cosmos is of unknown origin, but despite that there's not inconsiderable evidence, going back to the 1930s, to show that it's real, and without it galaxies would fly-apart. Dark matter is an intrinsic part of the currently accepted paradigm for the origin and evolution of the universe, the Lambda-CDM model, and has sculptured the structure we observe in the cosmos, which would never have formed in the current time-scale of the universe without its presence. Detecting dark matter particles is a major goal, and would take physics beyond the standard model of particle physics, as the most likely explanation is a particle of unknown nature.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

•Considered the long history, beginning in 1932, from Oort to Rubin, for the evidence of dark matter, and how observations of galaxies and galaxies clusters, through the study of velocity distributions, have required dark matter to exist if such objects are to persist.

•Reviewed further supporting evidence provided through observations of the Cosmic Microwave Background (CMB), most directly through observations of galaxy cluster collisions using the technique of gravitational lensing, and modelling of timescales for the emergence of large-scale structure in the universe, which would be too short without the helping hand of dark matter.

•In considering the nature of dark matter understand why MACHOs have been ruled out as a possible contender, and the present chase for WIMPs through various detection experiments that are presently underway, deep in underground mines and at the LHC.

•Looked at how dark matter may be distributed in a galaxy, the present discrepancy between models and observations, and the possible explanations to account for it.

 

Week 6 - What Next?

Purpose

•Assessment of student learning

•Assessment of student satisfaction

•Encouragement of further study

 

Each week of an online course is roughly equivalent to 2-3 hours of classroom time. On top of this, participants should expect to spend roughly 2-3 hours reading material, etc., although this will vary from person to person.

While they have a specific start and end date and will follow a weekly schedule (for example, week 1 will cover topic A, week 2 will cover topic B), our tutor-led online courses are designed to be flexible and as such would normally not require participants to be online for a specific day of the week or time of the day (although some tutors may try to schedule times where participants can be online together for web seminars, which will be recorded so that those who are unable to be online at certain times are able to access material).

Virtual Learning Environment

Unless otherwise stated, all course material will be posted on the Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) so that they can be accessed at any time throughout the duration of the course and interaction with your tutor and fellow participants will take place through a variety of different ways which will allow for both synchronous and asynchronous learning (discussion boards etc).

Certificate of participation

A Certificate of Participation will be awarded to participants who contribute constructively to weekly discussions and exercises/assignments for the duration of the course.

What our students say

"I really liked the videos, with clear illustrations/ graphics to support the course. The quizzes are great to confirm we've understood the course, and make sure we understand what is the important information to remember. I liked a lot the variety of exercises: from calculating distances to writing a short story."

"It’s truly been a splendid course, which was well presented with just the right amount of content in each module, that was enriching and easy to understand. The course was definitely up to and beyond expectations."

"This course has far exceeded my expectations. A real tour de force, and thank you, Hardip, for all the knowledge you have imparted and huge energy which you put into the course as the tutor and leader."

"For me this course was mind blowing, awe inspiring, wondrous, game changing, and it did indeed expanded my view of the universe. Also it gave me a different perspective to look at. Thank you Hardip for all your excitement that you brought to the course, your teachings, patience and humbleness. Your work and dedication is much appreciated."

"Even throughout videos, one can feel the tutor's passion for astronomy, and makes learning even more wonderful and entertaining. Also, explains really well the subjects.

"Great teacher, the content was always very well written, the topics inspiring. I would have like to have this tutor as my science teacher in high school! I would probably have continued to learn about science."

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Requirements
tab2html: 

Entry requirements

This course is open to everyone, and you don’t need any previous knowledge or experience of the subject to attend.

Our short courses are designed especially for adult learners who want to advance their personal or professional development. They are taught by tutors who are expert in both their subjects and in teaching students of all ages and experiences.

Please note that all teaching is in English. You should have near-native command of the English language in order to get the maximum benefit from the course.

tab3name: 
Fees & bursaries
tab3html: 

Fees

The course fee includes access to the course on our Virtual Learning Environment (VLE), personal feedback on your work from an expert tutor, a Certification of Participation (if you complete work and take part in discussions), and access to the class resources for two years after your course finishes.

VAT does not apply to course fees and there is no service charge (gratuities to domestic staff are left to your discretion).

Bursaries

For more information on available bursaries please see here.

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3
Course Image version: 
2
Study level ref: 
Canonical Course ID: 
31245

Read more at: Law and genetics

Law and genetics

Short description: 

Law in a changing genetic landscape.

Law creates artificial relationships between non-related people and entities. It even gives person-hood to non-biological beings such as companies and partnerships (although not yet to non-human species). Genetics describe the underlying relationship of all biological beings. For centuries, law and genetic science developed in parallel with very little overlap. But as genetic discoveries ride the crest of the technological revolution, law finds itself on the back foot. Legal instruments, such as property law and the law of obligations between non-related individuals were crafted in feudal times with the aim of protecting property beyond the death of the owner. With genetic discoveries, we face a myriad of questions, from ownership of gene editing techniques to the dangers of discrimination based on genetic predisposition for disease.

Type ref: 
Course code: 
2324NOE058
Start date: 
Thursday, 22 February, 2024 - 00:00 to Sunday, 7 April, 2024 - 01:00
Apply by: 
Thursday, 22 February, 2024 - 00:00
Course tutor id: 
9621
Course ID: 
30967
Tuition fee: 
£305
Course programme: 
Online Courses
Duration description: 
7 Weeks
Non-accredited
0
Course photo: 
City or Town: 
Postcode: 
Single capacity: 
0
Double capacity: 
0
Twin capacity: 
0
Single usage: 
0
Double usage: 
0
Twin usage: 
0
Maximum places: 
20
Booked places: 
6
Course cancelled: 
false
course status ref: 
booking destination ref: 
Tutor role ref: 
Tutor
Study mode ref: 
tab1name: 
Overview
tab1html: 

Aims of the course:

This course will explore how society developed systems of civil obligation and criminal deterrence. As we make our way through concepts of privacy, confidentiality, property and equality, we will ask what happens  to these hallowed concepts when they come up against 21st century biotechnologies riding the crest of the genetics wave.

Course content overview:

Orientation week

Purpose/Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

  • Become familiar with navigating around the VLE and from VLE to links and back
  • Tested their ability to access files and the web conferencing software and sorted out any problems with the help of the eLearning Helpdesk
  • Learnt how to look for, assess and reference internet resources
  • Used forums to introduce themselves to other students
  • Contributed to a discussion forum to introduce themselves to other students and discuss why they are interested in the course, what they hope to get out their studies and also to respond to News item sent out on behalf of tutor

Teaching Week 1: What is the law?

Purpose

An understanding of where law comes from, its primary objectives in maintaining civic society, why it is important to remember that some laws only govern transactions between individuals, others regulate the relations between the individual and the state, and completely different laws apply between nations.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have an understanding of:

  • The structure of law, legal concepts and relationships
  • Private/public responsibility, precedents and remedies
  • How all of this is relevant to the rules, regulations, conventions and other laws governing the use and application of genetic data.

Teaching Week 2: Law and technology

Purpose

Law evolves organically and politically and usually slowly. This is in contrast to technology which is a fast response to crisis and available tools and data. How quickly the latter outruns the former, and how “knee jerk” legal reactions to runaway innovations can be as damaging as they are helpful. Understanding that law is useless unless enforceable, and that there is no such thing as a global court/police force to ensure that international ethical rules are upheld.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have an understanding of:

  • CRSPR, ”designer babies”, food crops and GMO regulation
  • The debate around the legality or otherwise of He Jiankui’s procedure. The EU position on GMOs and the recent ruling from the Court of Justice on genetic editing v random mutagenesis.

Teaching Week 3: Law and genetic information

Purpose

Understanding how law categorises and seeks to protect personal information. Regulation of genetic information, medical confidentiality, doctors’ liability.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have an understanding of:

  • The intersection of regulation and genetics
  • The law of privacy, anonymity and medical confidentiality
  • Types of genetic disease
  • Genetic counselling and the law of negligence
  • Prenatal scanning and course actions for “diminished “ or “wrongful” life
  • Individual and family interests in genetic information and third parties’ interests in genetic information
  • Case study on the liability of local authorities and re-adoption genetic testing.

Teaching Week 4: Genetic discrimination

Purpose

What “discrimination” is in law, and how societies seek to control it via common law, statute and international law.  The state’s interest in genetic information.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have an understanding of:

  • “prohibited grounds” of discrimination
  • Prohibition of discrimination in the provision of services, employment and insurance
  • Attempts by countries (e.g. US and Canada) to prevent discrimination on the basis of genetic information
  • GINA

Teaching Week 5: Body parts and patents

Purpose

How law developed out of property rights; types of property recognised by all legal systems. This session will investigate the notion of proprietary interests in biological entities in the UK and other common law systems.  We will then explore the roots of patent law and the challenges presented to intellectual property regulators by genetic technology

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have an understanding of:

  • The law of body parts
  • No property in a body or body parts: Religious origins of rule, Slaves, grave robbers and animals
  • Current challenges: cosmetic surgery, trade in organs, retention of gametes by fertility clinics, etc
  • The notion of property rights arising out of “exercise of skill” (eg dissection or preservation)
  • Human Tissue Act 2004
  • Patent law
  • Origin, “inventive step”, CRSPR litigation

Schedule (this course is completed entirely online):

Orientation Week : 19-25 February 2024

Teaching Weeks: 26 February-31 March 2024

Feedback Week: 1-7 April 2024

Each week of an online course is roughly equivalent to 2-3 hours of classroom time. On top of this, participants should expect to spend roughly 2-3 hours reading material, etc., although this will vary from person to person.

While they have a specific start and end date and will follow a weekly schedule (for example, week 1 will cover topic A, week 2 will cover topic B), our tutor-led online courses are designed to be flexible and as such would normally not require participants to be online for a specific day of the week or time of the day (although some tutors may try to schedule times where participants can be online together for web seminars, which will be recorded so that those who are unable to be online at certain times are able to access material).

Unless otherwise stated, all course material will be posted on the Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) so that they can be accessed at any time throughout the duration of the course and interaction with your tutor and fellow participants will take place through a variety of different ways which will allow for both synchronous and asynchronous learning (discussion boards,etc).

Certificate of Participation

A Certificate of Participation will be awarded to participants who contribute constructively to weekly discussions and exercises/assignments for the duration of the course.

What our students say:

"The course fully met my expectations. I have acquired many valuable materials that I will gladly use in writing my dissertation"

"I am thankful to have learnt from everyone since the beginning of this course. I also value the insightful course material and guidance from our tutor that has made this learning process very fulfilling!"

"I must say that this course has been to a reasonable extend an eye opener for me about what is going on in the world of genetics and  the advancement  in the technology of DNA modification. I truly enjoy all the topics in the course. I also enjoyed all the contributions to each topic. I honestly shared both the anxieties and enthusiasm of professionals on the course."

tab2name: 
Requirements
tab2html: 

Entry requirements

This course is open to everyone, and you don’t need any previous knowledge or experience of the subject to attend.

Our short courses are designed especially for adult learners who want to advance their personal or professional development. They are taught by tutors who are expert in both their subjects and in teaching students of all ages and experiences.

Please note that all teaching is in English. You should have near-native command of the English language in order to get the maximum benefit from the course.

tab3name: 
Fees & bursaries
tab3html: 

Fees

The course fee includes access to the course on our Virtual Learning Environment (VLE), personal feedback on your work from an expert tutor, a Certification of Participation (if you complete work and take part in discussions), and access to the class resources for two years after your course finishes.

VAT does not apply to course fees and there is no service charge (gratuities to domestic staff are left to your discretion).

Bursaries

For more information on bursaries please see here.

tab1order: 
1
tab2order: 
2
tab3order: 
3
Course Image version: 
2
Study level ref: 
Canonical Course ID: 
31229

Read more at: Gloriana: the life and times of Elizabeth I, 1533-1603

Gloriana: the life and times of Elizabeth I, 1533-1603

Short description: 

She was called Gloriana. The Virgin Queen. Elizabeth created a propaganda image of herself embodying English victories and English power which has endured into the 21st century. But what was the reality of her reign? This course will seek to explore the life and times of this extraordinary woman and, in the process, uncover something of the truth behind the mask. We will explore such topics as her troubled and often dangerous youth, her policies as Queen where she was a woman in a man's world, as well as looking at some of the famous events and personalities of her reign.

Subject ref: 
Type ref: 
Course code: 
2324NOE057
Start date: 
Monday, 19 February, 2024 - 00:00 to Sunday, 7 April, 2024 - 01:00
Apply by: 
Sunday, 18 February, 2024 - 00:00
Course tutor id: 
305
Course ID: 
30966
Tuition fee: 
£305
Course programme: 
Online Courses
Duration description: 
7 Weeks
Non-accredited
0
Course photo: 
City or Town: 
Postcode: 
Single capacity: 
0
Double capacity: 
0
Twin capacity: 
0
Single usage: 
0
Double usage: 
0
Twin usage: 
0
Maximum places: 
20
Booked places: 
6
Course cancelled: 
false
course status ref: 
booking destination ref: 
Tutor role ref: 
Tutor
Purpose ref: 
Study mode ref: 
tab1name: 
Course information
tab1html: 

Aims of the course:

  1. To provide a narrative of the life and times of Elizabeth I
  2. To introduce the key personalities and events in her life and reign and their significance
  3. To consider some aspects of the social and cultural life of Elizabethan England

Course content overview:

This course aims to provide a comprehensive introduction to the general narrative of the period 1533-1603, focusing upon the life and reign of Elizabeth I. The course will examine the personalities involved, religious, social and cultural history, the war with Spain and the Armada as well as discussing some of the long-term consequences of the reign.

Schedule (this course is completed entirely online):

Orientation Week: 19-25 February 2024

Teaching Weeks: 26 February-31 March 2024

Feedback Week: 1-7 April 2024

Week 0  - Preparing to study this course

Purpose/Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

•Become familiar with navigating around the VLE and from VLE to links and back

•Tested their ability to access files and the web conferencing software and sorted out any problems with the help of the eLearning team

•Learnt how to look for, assess and reference internet resources

•Used Quickmail to introduce themselves to other students

•Contributed to a discussion forum to introduce themselves to other students and discuss why they are interested in the course, what they hope to get out of their studies and also to respond to news items sent out on behalf of tutor

Week 1 - Elizabeth: Princess, bastard and Queen, 1533 - 1558

Purpose

To study the life of Elizabeth Tudor from her birth in 1533 to her accession in 1558, this will include:

-The exploration of her changing status from being heir presumptive, to being declared illegitimate after the fall of her mother, Anne Boleyn.

-Elizabeth’s education

-Elizabeth’s religion

-Her relationship with her half-brother Edward VI

-Her relationship with her half-sister Mary and the dangers she faced as a focus for opposition to Mary

-Her accession to the throne

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

•Understood something of Elizabeth’s upbringing and its affects upon her personality

•How she survived the reign of her half-sister Mary

•The manner of her accession

Week 2 - A woman in a man’s world – Elizabeth and her rule

Purpose

This week will concentrate on how Elizabeth established and maintained her rule – as a woman in a man’s world – for over forty years. We will look at her relationships with her leading ministers, her Parliaments and the Church. We will consider why she never married and how she used her sex to win the allegiance of her leading male subjects, an important aspect of this being the propagation of the cult of ‘Gloriana’ and the strict control of the Queen’s image.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

•Considered how Elizabeth worked with her ministers, Parliaments and leading subjects

•Considered why Elizabeth never married

•Some understanding of the significance of the ‘cult’ of the Queen

•Some understanding of the significance of such figures as Burghley, Walsingham, Leicester, etc.

 

Week 3 - The Elizabethan Religious Settlement – Anglicans, Puritans and Catholics

Purpose

When Elizabeth came to the throne England had experienced over 30 years of religious upheaval. Elizabeth rejected the Catholicism of her predecessor, Mary, and reasserted the Royal Supremacy. However, she also aimed to defuse religious tensions by creating an Anglican Church wide enough to comprehend most of her subjects. We will look at the successes and failures of this policy, in particular, the threats to it from, on the one hand, the Puritans and on the other, the Roman Catholics.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

•Some understanding of Elizabeth’s religious views

•Some understanding of the Elizabethan Religious Settlement and the Anglican compromise

•Some insight into the views and actions of those who contested the religious settlement – Puritans and Roman Catholics

•Understood the link between religious allegiance in England and politics abroad.

Week 4 - Religion, Spain and the Armada

Purpose

From 1570, when Elizabeth was excommunicated by the Pope, English Catholics were increasingly seen as a treasonous fifth column within the realm, working for the Papacy and the great Catholic power of Spain. This week will explore the threat to Elizabeth’s rule and person posed by Catholic powers abroad and the danger of Catholic plots and rebellion at home. We will consider the place of Mary, Queen of Scots, the significance of the Jesuit missions, and whether English Catholics were ever a real threat to the regime and the events surrounding the Spanish Armada of 1588.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

•Some understanding of the place of English Catholics under Elizabeth and the significance of the Jesuit missions

•Some understanding of the life and significance of Mary, Queen of Scots

•Understood the narrative of the Spanish Armada

•Considered the place of the ‘sea dogs’ – Drake, Raleigh, Frobisher, etc. The contest with Spain before 1588 and its significance for the birth of English seapower and empire.

Week 5 - The Elizabethan Age

Purpose

In art, architecture and literature the Elizabethan Age is one of the most significant in English history. This week will concentrate on looking at something of that legacy, from the ‘prodigy’ houses of the aristocracy to the early plays of William Shakespeare. We will end the course with a consideration of the last years of Elizabeth and the accession of James VI of Scotland as James I of England in 1603.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

•Some appreciation of developments in the arts, architecture and literature

•Some understanding of why this period should have been so culturally fertile

•Some insight into the way people lived and worked

•Some insight into the ‘mental world’ of the age

•Some understanding of why the Stuarts succeeded the Tudors in 1603

 

Week 6 - What Next?

Purpose

•Assessment of student learning

•Assessment of student satisfaction

•Encouragement of further study

 

Each week of an online course is roughly equivalent to 2-3 hours of classroom time. On top of this, participants should expect to spend roughly 2-3 hours reading material, etc., although this will vary from person to person.

While they have a specific start and end date and will follow a weekly schedule (for example, week 1 will cover topic A, week 2 will cover topic B), our tutor-led online courses are designed to be flexible and as such would normally not require participants to be online for a specific day of the week or time of the day (although some tutors may try to schedule times where participants can be online together for web seminars, which will be recorded so that those who are unable to be online at certain times are able to access material).

Unless otherwise stated, all course material will be posted on the Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) so that they can be accessed at any time throughout the duration of the course and interaction with your tutor and fellow participants will take place through a variety of different ways which will allow for both synchronous and asynchronous learning (discussion boards,etc).

Certificate of Participation

A Certificate of Participation will be awarded to participants who contribute constructively to weekly discussions and exercises/assignments for the duration of the course.

What our students say:

"It was comprehensive, clearly laid out and enhanced by both visual sources and further reading lists."

"The course covered the subject well with a good variety of material"

"Andrew is clearly knowledgeable and approachable. I enjoyed what he presented and the way he brought art, film etc into play alongside the written word."

"Responsive, encouraging and thoroughly knowledgeable."

tab2name: 
Entry requirements
tab2html: 

This course is open to everyone, and you don’t need any previous knowledge or experience of the subject to attend.

Our online courses are designed especially for adult learners who want to advance their personal or professional development. They are taught by tutors who are expert in both their subjects and in teaching students of all ages and experiences.

For information on bursaries for this course, please see http://www.ice.cam.ac.uk/info/bursaries

tab3name: 
Fees & bursaries
tab3html: 

Fees

The course fee includes access to the course on our Virtual Learning Environment (VLE), personal feedback on your work from an expert tutor, a Certification of Participation (if you complete work and take part in discussions for the duration of the course), and access to the class resources for two years after your course finishes.

VAT does not apply to course fees and there is no service charge (gratuities to domestic staff are left to your discretion).

Bursaries

The Cambridge University Press (CUP) Bursary Fund offers a bursary of 50% of the course fee to applicants who teach in a UK state school or state-funded further education institution, applying to study a day school, weekend course or online course.

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1
tab2order: 
2
tab3order: 
3
Course Image version: 
2
Study level ref: 
Canonical Course ID: 
31187

Read more at: Roman and Greek mythology

Roman and Greek mythology

Short description: 

Classical mythology is the greatest collaborative tale ever told, spanning a millennium and two cultures with characters and themes so powerful that they remain cultural archetypes today. This course demonstrates both how individual myths fit into the story, and how mythology itself fitted into Greek and Roman religion and culture.

Subject ref: 
Type ref: 
Course code: 
2324NOE030
Start date: 
Monday, 23 October, 2023 - 01:00 to Sunday, 10 December, 2023 - 00:00
Apply by: 
Sunday, 22 October, 2023 - 01:00
Course tutor id: 
1376
Course ID: 
30954
Tuition fee: 
£305
Course programme: 
Online Courses
Duration description: 
7 Weeks
Non-accredited
0
Course photo: 
City or Town: 
Postcode: 
Single capacity: 
0
Double capacity: 
0
Twin capacity: 
0
Single usage: 
0
Double usage: 
0
Twin usage: 
0
Maximum places: 
20
Booked places: 
14
Course cancelled: 
false
course status ref: 
booking destination ref: 
Tutor role ref: 
Tutor
Purpose ref: 
Study mode ref: 
tab1name: 
Course information
tab1html: 

Aims of the course:

  1. To introduce the ancient Greek and Roman myths and show how they developed and absorbed elements of different Mediterranean cultures.
  2. To show that individual myths are contained within a meta-narrative which has a beginning, middle and end
  3. To analyse the nature of the myths, common themes and what the myths tell us about the societies which created them
  4. To learn something of the ancient approach to religion and religious thought.

Course content overview:

The course will largely concentrate on translations of the original ancient texts and will attempt to understand the nature of myth in a non-technical and jargon free manner.

Schedule:

Orientation Week : 23-29 October 2023

Teaching Weeks: 30 October-3 December 2023

Feedback Week: 4-10 December 2023

Week 0 - Orientation week, preparing to study this course

By studying this week the students should have:
•    Become familiar with navigating around the VLE and from VLE to links and back
•    Tested their ability to access files and the web conferencing software and sorted out any problems with the help of the eLearning team
•    Investigated the ICE Online Resources repository
•    Learnt how to look for, assess and reference internet resources
•    Used Qmail to introduce themselves to other students and discuss why they are interested in the course and what they hope to get out their studies.
•    Contributed to a discussion forum in response to News item sent out on behalf of the tutor.
•    Understood the format of each weekly module

Week 1 - The nature of ancient gods

By studying this week the students should have:
•    A knowledge of how Greek and Romans saw their Gods
•    An appreciation of how classical  culture interacted with the divine
•    A grasp of the henotheism, polytheism  and monotheism and what differentiates a religion from a cult.

Week 2 - The nature of Creation myths

By studying this week the students should have:
•    A knowledge of the key Greek texts, particularly Hesiod
•    An understanding of the common elements  of a creation myth
•    An appreciation of ancient understanding of time

Week 3 - The Gods

By studying this week the students should have:
•    Familiarity with gods Olympian, cthonic  and foreign
•    An understanding of the nature of ritual and prophesy in the ancient world
•    An appreciation of the complementary nature of myth and religion

Week 4 - The heroes

By studying this week the students should have:
•    An understanding of the basic heroic quest
•    A knowledge of the main Greek heroes and the concomitant  chronology and ancestry
•    An appreciation of the social questions and conflicts that the myths tried to identify and explain

Week 5 - The Trojan war and the aftermath (Aeneid and Odyssey)

By studying this week the students should have:

•    A good understanding of three of the most important texts in literature
•    An appreciation of the effect of these texts on ancient and modern society
•    An understanding of the world of Odysseus
•    An appreciation of how the material  studied earlier in the course comes together in the final week

Certificate of Participation

A Certificate of Participation will be awarded to participants who contribute constructively to weekly discussions and exercises/assignments for the duration of the course.

What our students say

"The tutor is fantastic! The online materials are wonderful and informative. Even better, he encourages us to be active on the forums, and chimes in with comments and answers to questions there on a regular basis. The tutor moderates the weekly online seminars so that everyone has a chance to speak and answer each question without any single person dominating. I have learned so much from this course, and now have a list of extra books and articles to read that I will never finish in my lifetime!"

"It exceeded my expectations, particularly in providing context for the myths and an understanding of their development as a corpus."

"I found the content very accessible. The content covered a wide range of topics, and has allowed for more study in specific areas should the student wish to do so in the future. I think this course gives a solid grounding in the general aspects of Greek and Roman myths and legends. I would recommend this course to anyone interested in this topic and a great way of dipping their toe into academic study on the topic."

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Entry requirements
tab2html: 

This course is open to everyone, and you don’t need any previous knowledge or experience of the subject to attend.

Our short courses are designed especially for adult learners who want to advance their personal or professional development. They are taught by tutors who are expert in both their subjects and in teaching students of all ages and experiences.

Please note that all teaching is in English. You should have near-native command of the English language in order to get the maximum benefit from the course.

For information on bursaries for this course, please see http://www.ice.cam.ac.uk/info/bursaries

tab3name: 
Fees & bursaries
tab3html: 

Fees

The course fee includes access to the course on our Virtual Learning Environment (VLE), personal feedback on your work from an expert tutor, a Certification of Participation (if you complete work and take part in discussions for the duration of the course), and access to the class resources for two years after your course finishes.

VAT does not apply to course fees and there is no service charge (gratuities to domestic staff are left to your discretion).

Bursaries

The Cambridge University Press (CUP) Bursary Fund offers a bursary of 50% of the course fee to applicants who teach in a UK state school or state-funded further education institution, applying to study a day school, weekend course or online course.

tab1order: 
1
tab2order: 
2
tab3order: 
3
Course Image version: 
2
Study level ref: 
Canonical Course ID: 
31192

Read more at: The Viking age

The Viking age

Subject ref: 
Type ref: 
Course code: 
2324NOE038
Start date: 
Monday, 8 January, 2024 - 00:00 to Sunday, 25 February, 2024 - 00:00
Apply by: 
Sunday, 7 January, 2024 - 00:00
Course ID: 
30956
Tuition fee: 
£305
Course programme: 
Online Courses
Duration description: 
7 Weeks
Non-accredited
0
Course photo: 
City or Town: 
Postcode: 
Single capacity: 
0
Double capacity: 
0
Twin capacity: 
0
Single usage: 
0
Double usage: 
0
Twin usage: 
0
Maximum places: 
20
Booked places: 
19
Course cancelled: 
false
course status ref: 
booking destination ref: 
Purpose ref: 
Study mode ref: 
tab1name: 
Overview
tab1html: 

Aims of the course

  • To introduce participants to the archaeology and heritage of the Viking Age
  • To encourage participants to think critically  and creatively about Viking Age archaeology and heritage
  • To enable participants to work collaboratively with their peers to further their understanding and presentation of this period

Course content overview

Who were the Vikings? What legacies and traces have they left behind? How and why did they fare beyond Scandinavia? How are they perceived and presented today? Dr. Britt Baillie and scholars from the Roskilde Viking Ship Museum will guide students through the archaeological remains from and heritage sites that interpret this period. The course will address the subject through a series of thematic lectures on Viking society, ships, trade, religion, art and burial.  It will explore both their activities ‘at home’ in Scandinavia as well as abroad (in the British Isles, the New World, Russia, etc).

Learning outcomes

As a result of the course, within the constraints of the time available, participants should be able to:

  1. Discuss Viking Age archaeological data (such as artefacts, site plans, and distributions maps, etc) 
  2. Evaluate the relative merit and limitations of the archaeological and historical evidence for this period and the difficulties integrating them
  3. Gain knowledge of the variability of the archaeological record in different parts of the Viking World

Schedule (this course is completed entirely online)

Orientation Week: 8-14 January 2024

Teaching Weeks: 15 January-18 February 2024

Feedback Week: 19-25 February 2024

Teaching Week 1 - The Dawn of the Viking Age

Who were the Vikings? Why did they risk life and limb to travel trade, raid, and settle in far flung places? The first week will explore what lead to the early Viking raids and subsequent journeys through Europe to Africa, North America, and the Middle East.

What was everyday life like in the Viking homelands? What were the belief systems that underpinned the Viking world? Who held power and how did encounters with others impact life ‘back home’? We will also examine how archaeology shines light on how Viking Age society was structured in Scandinavia in terms of class, gender, and religion.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week participants should have:

  • An overview of the Viking Age including its chronological duration and geographical expanse.
  • An awareness of the material evidence which indicates gender and social strata in Viking society.

Teaching Week 2 - Viking-Age ships and seafaring

This week will probe how the maritime technology of the Vikings defined their success in war and peace. The boat and ship finds of the Viking Age demonstrate that many different types and sizes of watercrafts were built. At the beginning of the Viking Age we see the transformation of the Iron Age rowing vessel into a proper sailing ship, and later also a specialisation in terms of design. The ship was a symbol of status and power and had an important role in the cosmology of the era. But even more important, the ship was the precondition for the Scandinavians to expand their maritime activities, resulting in a growing economy consisting of complex trading networks, piracy, conquests and bold voyages into the unknown.

We will also examine how the process of reconstructing Viking ships has revealed how raw materials utilised for building the ships were carefully selected, and to achieve the desired qualities and properties in the raw materials, woodland management was conducted. Many different crafts were involved in building a ship and the craftsmanship conducted is truly astonishing.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week participants should have:

  • A basic understanding of clinker vessels; an overview of the main Viking ship forms and functions;
  • An appreciation of the importance of contemporary Viking ship reconstructions. 

Teaching Week 3 - Slaves and silver: raiding and trading in the Viking Age

Norse merchants stimulated the development of long-distance, regional and local trade and exchange networks. How were the Vikings able to bring so much silver to the North? This week we will look at how hoards, and changes in towns shine a light on the raiding and trading of the Vikings.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week participants should have:

  • An understanding of the variety of functions performed by hoards and of the changing nature of emporia in the Viking era.

Teaching Week 4 - Ladby: a Danish ship grave from the Viking Age

This week explores ship burials an iconic feature of the Viking era by focusing on the case-study of Ladby. Why was the ship burial located here? What does its rich collection of grave goods tell us about the person who was buried in it? Why was it desecrated?

The ship-grave from Ladby is one of a few known big Scandinavian ship-graves from the 9th – 10th centuries.  Around 900 AD a small war-ship was placed in a trench on the highest point in a burial-ground from the Late Iron Age and the Viking Age. The ship was used as the last resting place for an important person indicated by the splendour of the grave equipment. The skeletons of 11 horses and 3-4 dogs and more than 600 fragments of riding gear, tableware, a gaming board, weapons, artwork, gold adorned textile and objects probably connected to power and a high social status. The ship-grave from Ladby displays a wide geographical framework, which is demonstrated both by the form of the grave and by the provenance of several objects among the grave goods.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week participants should have:

  • An understanding of how Viking Age grave goods can be analysed and interpreted.

Teaching Week 5 - The dusk of the Viking Age and its long shadow

This week we will probe the tail end of the Viking Age exploring the birth of the Scandinavian kingdoms, the impacts of Christianity on Viking society, and the legacy of the Normans.

Viking heritage consists of museums, designated sites, theme parks, reconstructions, fairs, routes and events. We will also examines how notions of authenticity and commodification are constructed through the staging of types of Viking heritage.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week participants should have:

  • An overview of the key shifts which changed Scandinavian society at the end of what is regarded as the Viking Age
  • An understanding of how Viking –Era archaeological remains are transformed into heritage and how questions of authenticity and commodification impact that journey.

Each week of an online course is roughly equivalent to 2-3 hours of classroom time. On top of this, participants should expect to spend roughly 2-3 hours reading material, etc., although this will vary from person to person.

While they have a specific start and end date and will follow a weekly schedule (for example, week 1 will cover topic A, week 2 will cover topic B), our tutor-led online courses are designed to be flexible and as such would normally not require participants to be online for a specific day of the week or time of the day (although some tutors may try to schedule times where participants can be online together for web seminars, which will be recorded so that those who are unable to be online at certain times are able to access material).

Virtual Learning Environment

Unless otherwise stated, all course material will be posted on the Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) so that they can be accessed at any time throughout the duration of the course and interaction with your tutor and fellow participants will take place through a variety of different ways which will allow for both synchronous and asynchronous learning (discussion boards etc).

Certificate of participation

A Certificate of Participation will be awarded to participants who contribute constructively to weekly discussions and exercises/assignments for the duration of the course.

What our students say:

"Britt is an excellent tutor - her knowledge and enthusiasm really brought the subject to life. I consider myself very lucky to have spent the last 7 weeks learning from all the experts who delivered this course. What a privilege! I liked the fact the course was online - I would never have been able to do something like this if it had been in person."

"There was more discussion of archaeological findings than I had expected, especially in the seminars, but I was happy about this because I am interested in archaeology and have studied it before. I have been interested in the Vikings for many years and I have studied them in previous academic courses. I greatly enjoyed this course and I learned a lot about many aspects of the Vikings. I particularly enjoyed all the discussions about Viking ships."

"Britt is very available, attentive and resourceful. I really enjoyed working with her."

tab2name: 
Requirements
tab2html: 

Entry requirements

This course is open to everyone, and you don’t need any previous knowledge or experience of the subject to attend.

Our short courses are designed especially for adult learners who want to advance their personal or professional development. They are taught by tutors who are expert in both their subjects and in teaching students of all ages and experiences.

Please note that all teaching is in English. You should have near-native command of the English language in order to get the maximum benefit from the course.

tab3name: 
Fees & bursaries
tab3html: 

Fees

The course fee includes access to the course on our Virtual Learning Environment (VLE), personal feedback on your work from an expert tutor, a Certification of Participation (if you complete work and take part in discussions), and access to the class resources for two years after your course finishes.

VAT does not apply to course fees and there is no service charge (gratuities to domestic staff are left to your discretion).

Bursaries

The Cambridge University Press (CUP) Bursary Fund offers a bursary of 50% of the course fee to applicants who teach in a UK state school or state-funded further education institution, applying to study a day school, weekend course or online course.

tab1order: 
1
tab2order: 
2
tab3order: 
3
Course Image version: 
2
Study level ref: 
Canonical Course ID: 
31188

Read more at: Milton and the meaning of freedom: an introduction to Paradise Lost

Milton and the meaning of freedom: an introduction to Paradise Lost

Short description: 

One of the greatest of all English poets, Milton was also one of history’s great advocates of liberty.  He not only dedicated his pen to the causes of democracy, free speech, and religious toleration, but risked his life in pursuit of them.  However, he also saw first-hand how easily a nation’s exercise of freedom goes astray. In his renowned epic poem Paradise Lost, he does more than tell a great story in resounding language:  he also sends a timeless message to posterity, that true liberty ― the kind worth taking a stand for ― means not merely freedom to pursue selfish desires, but the capacity to take moral responsibility for our choices, and by our example to help humanity rise up to its extraordinary potential for good.

Subject ref: 
Type ref: 
Course code: 
2324NOE045
Start date: 
Monday, 8 January, 2024 - 00:00 to Sunday, 25 February, 2024 - 00:00
Apply by: 
Sunday, 7 January, 2024 - 00:00
Course tutor id: 
1406
Course ID: 
30962
Tuition fee: 
£305
Course programme: 
Online Courses
Duration description: 
7 Weeks
Non-accredited
0
Course photo: 
City or Town: 
Postcode: 
Single capacity: 
0
Double capacity: 
0
Twin capacity: 
0
Single usage: 
0
Double usage: 
0
Twin usage: 
0
Maximum places: 
20
Booked places: 
16
Course cancelled: 
false
course status ref: 
booking destination ref: 
Tutor role ref: 
Tutor
Purpose ref: 
Study mode ref: 
tab1name: 
Course information
tab1html: 

Aims of the course:

  • To introduce students to critical study of Milton’s Paradise Lost.
  • To provide students with the basic historical, intellectual and literary context needed to understand and appreciate Milton’s poetry and thought.
  • To bring to light some of the key things that give Paradise Lost such lasting importance and continuing capacity to inspire.

Learning outcomes:

As a result of the course, within the constraints of the time available, students should be able to:

  •  Develop a critical approach to understanding Milton’s Paradise Lost.
  •  Assess the poem’s relationship to Milton’s wider thought and historical role.
  •  Evaluate the merits of some influential critical views of the poem.

Course content overview:

Course content overview:

One of the greatest of all English poets, Milton was also one of history’s great advocates of liberty.  He not only dedicated his pen to the causes of democracy, free speech, and religious toleration, but risked his life in pursuit of them.  However, he also saw first-hand how easily a nation’s exercise of freedom goes astray. In his renowned epic poem Paradise Lost, he does more than tell a great story in resounding language:  he also sends a timeless message to posterity, that true liberty ― the kind worth taking a stand for ― means not merely freedom to pursue selfish desires, but the capacity to take moral responsibility for our choices, and by our example to help humanity rise up to its extraordinary potential for good.

The century in which Milton lived saw a deep and permanent change in the way Britain was governed ― the decisive rejection of royal absolutism and state control over religion, and the establishment in their place of such modern ideas as parliamentary sovereignty and religious toleration.  But Milton himself, though a vocal proponent of these changes, did not live to see their final victory.  Rather, his last years were spent under a restored monarchy, after the revolutionary nation to which he had dedicated his adult life failed to establish a viable self-government, and instead finally chose (as he saw it) to crawl back wilfully into the embrace of the regal tyranny that it had so recently and so heroically shaken off.

How to explain this apparently voluntary defeat?  And how, above all, to inspire a nation once again with the ideals from which they had turned away?  Only one thing remained:  to return to his youthful calling as a poet, and at last to complete the great didactic poem that he had long imagined ― addressing it now not only to his contemporaries but to posterity, and instilling into it all that life and study had taught him about freedom and tyranny, and about the choice we make between them in every generation.

In Paradise Lost, Milton roots his definition and defence of true freedom in a larger moral and theological vision addressing the very nature of humanity and the purpose of human life.  To understand that vision and its implications, we will need to consider his innovative and critical take on some central ideas of the Western poetic, philosophical and religious traditions, as well as his strong lived sense of humanity’s dilemma and potential dignity as a rational and passionate creature.

In Week One, we will look at Milton’s place in the momentous historical events that shook England during his lifetime, with especial attention to his famous tract in defence of free speech, religious toleration, and accountable government, the Areopagitica.  From Week Two onward, we will look closely at Paradise Lost itself, progressing through the poem from start to finish, while continuing to build our understanding of key aspects of its poetic form, its subject matter, and its didactic aims.

Emphasis will be placed throughout on looking attentively at the words Milton wrote, and students will be invited to participate each week in closely reading significant passages from his major works, especially Paradise Lost.  Weekly presentations and readings will provide historical and critical context, as well as initiating the close reading activities and group discussions to be pursued by the students.

Schedule (this course is completed entirely online):

Orientation Week: 8-14 January 2024 

Teaching Weeks: 15 January-18 February 2024

Feedback Week: 19-25 February 2024

Recommended set text:

John Milton, The Major Works (Oxford World Classics), ed. Stephen Orgel and
Jonathan Goldberg, (Oxford University Press), 2008.

Many other modern editions of Paradise Lost (and of the other set text,
Areopagitica) are available, and you will be able get by with any of them;
but it is strongly recommended that you acquire the specified Oxford
edition of Milton's Major Works because, besides the whole of Paradise Lost
and Areopagitica, it also very conveniently includes most of the other
works by Milton to which the course tutor will refer throughout the course.

Detailed Course Schedule

Week 0 - Preparing to study this course

Purpose/Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

  • Become familiar with navigating around the VLE and from VLE to links and back.
  • Tested their ability to access files and the web conferencing software and sorted out any problems with the help of the eLearning team
  • Learnt how to look for and reference internet resources.
  • Used Quickmail to introduce themselves to other students
  • Contributed to a discussion forum to introduce themselves to other students and discuss why they are interested in the course, what they hope to get out their studies and also to respond to a question set by tutor aimed at initiating critical discussion of Milton.

 

Week 1 - Milton’s Revolutionary Ideas (Text for Close Study:  Areopagitica)

Purpose

  • Students will be introduced to Milton’s historical situation and political thought by way of a close look at his best-known prose work, the Areopagitica, a Speech for the Liberty of Unlicensed Printing (1644).
  • Historical context will be provided, describing key events in the 1630s and 1640s leading up to and during the English Civil War, in whose context Milton’s passionately held ideas about political and religious freedom gradually took shape.
  • A critical reading of Areopagitica itself will elucidate its argument, highlight some of its central ideas and presuppositions as well as the limitations with which its argument is hedged, and will give consideration to how this important tract fits into the history of Western political ideas.  Attention will also be drawn to the ways in which Areopagitica anticipates some key themes of Paradise Lost.
  • Other important works written by Milton during this period will be mentioned, including his short poem Lycidas (1637), his early prose work The Reason of Church Government (1642), and his uncompromising defence of the revolutionary execution of King Charles I, The Tenure of Kings and Magistrates (1649).

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

  • Understood the historical context in which Milton’s ideas were articulated.
  • Seen in detail the grounds on which Milton argued in favour of political and religious liberty.
  • Closely read and discussed an important example of Milton’s political prose.

Week 2 - Milton and Epic Poetry (Text for Close Study:  Paradise Lost, Books 1 – 3)

Purpose

  • Students will be introduced to the opening books of Paradise Lost by way of a consideration of the poem’s relation to the tradition of epic poetry as Milton understood it.
  • In writing his epic poem Paradise Lost, Milton explicitly and ambitiously set out to achieve in English what Homer had done in Greek and Virgil in Latin.  But why did he choose to imitate this ancient poetic form? What was his understanding of epic poetry, and of what it can do?  And how did he adapt it to his modern purposes in the historical and cultural circumstances of seventeenth-century England?
  • As we look closely at the opening three books of Paradise Lost this week, we will consider closely two crucial characteristics of epic poetry ― form and content ― and we will ask how Milton saw them as contributing to his aim of writing a poem that could have a significant moral impact on the world.
  • Under the rubric of form, we will give especial attention to the distinctive and powerful verse form of Milton’s poem, asking how it works and what the author set out to achieve by writing in this style.
  • Turning to the question of content, we will observe that, for Milton, an epic poem was essentially the story of a hero, a virtuous figure capable of inspiring imitation.  Accordingly, a key choice for the aspiring epic poet was who one’s hero was to be, that is, which story of heroism to retell.  Yet after many years of pondering this question, he finally wrote a poem in which it is famously debatable who the hero is ― and in which the most obvious candidate for that role is an astonishingly unconventional choice, especially for an author who was a committed Christian:  namely, the Devil himself.
  • So is Satan really the hero of Paradise Lost, as many readers down through the centuries have supposed?  If so, what could it mean for Milton to have made such a choice?  And if that was not his intention, what is it about the poem that has misled so many readers into reaching that conclusion?  Or was Milton himself, as William Blake famously suggested, somehow “of the Devil’s party without knowing it”?
  • We will consider these questions in light of the long critical tradition, looking closely at the poem itself for clues, to discover what examining the issue of heroism can teach us about Paradise Lost.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

  • Learned about the nature and significance of epic poetry as Milton understood it.
  • Seen how Milton adapts some important epic conventions to his purposes in the opening books of Paradise Lost.
  • Understood the importance of the verse form and the role of heroism in epic poetry.
  • Discussed the basis for the influential idea that Satan is the hero of Paradise Lost.

Week 3 - Milton and The Bible (Text for Close Study:  Paradise Lost, Books 4 – 6)

Purpose

  • As we proceed to the part of Paradise Lost which introduces its human characters Adam and Eve, we will shift our focus from the poem’s classical heritage in the tradition of epic poetry, to its equally prominent grounding in the Christian scriptures.  We will ask why Milton chose, as the narrative basis of his poem, to retell a story from the Bible, and why in particular the story of the expulsion of Adam and Eve from the Garden of Eden.
  • In order to get to grips with these questions, we will look carefully at what Christianity meant to Milton. We will see that, though Milton’s England understood itself to be a Christian nation, the very nature and meaning of ‘true’ Christianity was intensely contested, indeed was a central issue in the English Civil War through which he lived.  What is more, although Milton emphatically took sides in this contest, his own understanding of Christianity was far from conforming to the majority view even within the ‘Puritan’ camp with which he is sometimes misleadingly identified.  We will look closely at what Milton’s very personal understanding of Christianity was, how it determined his approach to the Bible, and how it shaped in striking ways his choice and handling of a Bible story in Paradise Lost.
  • As part of this week’s exercise in exploring the scriptural basis of Milton’s poem, we will closely read the Bible story (Genesis, chapters 1 – 3) on which Milton bases his narrative, trying to see the Biblical text itself with fresh eyes from something like a Miltonic perspective.  We will discover how, from Milton’s point of view, this very familiar story nonetheless presented quite extraordinary problems, raising profound questions about God’s wisdom and justice, which he felt it was absolutely necessary to answer if one was to make sense of being a Christian at all.  We will then return to Paradise Lost, to see how these pressing questions end up featuring in crucial ways in the poem.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

  • Understood the basic tenets of Milton’s Christianity, and the importance of the Bible to him
  • explored in detail the Biblical story on which Paradise Lost is based.
  • Considered the significance of this specific story to Milton, and examined critically some key ways in which he adapts it in the retelling. 

Week 4 - The Fall:  Milton on Getting it Wrong (Paradise Lost, Books 7 – 9)

Purpose

  • This week, as we reach the story’s crisis in Book Nine of Paradise Lost, we will look closely at how the poet represents the human capacity to make catastrophic choices directly contrary to our own true interests.
  • In order to make sense of Milton’s treatment of this theme, we will need to establish some background in two areas:  firstly, in the philosophical tradition going back to Plato which described the human propensity for setting our hearts on the wrong things in terms of an intrinsic conflict in our nature between rational and passionate motivations; and secondly, in the Christian theological tradition rooted in Augustine, which tried to account for the human capacity to do wrong in terms of God’s gift to us of free will.
  • We will see how Milton drew deeply on both these traditions, but also how he approached them both in a highly critical spirit, giving to his own account of human choice a very personal slant.  Not least, his poem provokes us to ask why a wise and benevolent God would have created us prone to making poor choices by endowing us not only with reason but also with potentially misleading passionate desires, and indeed why God would have given us the power of free choice at all, knowing we would use it to our own harm. Can a God who created us so fallible really blame us for our mistakes, taking no part of the blame himself?  Still more fundamentally, the poem confronts us with the question whether, finding ourselves constituted as we are, we can really accept that we are the creatures of a wise and benevolent God, or whether on the contrary it might even be better to rebel against that story, deliberately making the very choices which we are told God has expressly forbidden.
  • Entangled with these questions, both in the Biblical story per se and in the Christian theological tradition, is the question of the respective moral responsibilities, and culpabilities, of women and men.  At its worst, that tradition had used the story of Adam and Eve to justify a view of women as inherently prone to sin, and to deny them the capacity for independent moral agency.  Milton confronts this tradition too, seeking an interpretation of the Bible compatible with his conviction that all humans are free moral agents with an ability to choose the good, and that no person’s moral failings can validly be blamed on another.
  • In Paradise Lost, Milton grapples with all these questions not just in the abstract, but in concrete narrative terms.  That is to say, he tries not merely to argue his way to a viable answer, but to show it plausibly at work in a the actions of believably human characters.  Does he succeed?  And what can we learn along the way about a set of ideas which still play a large part in shaping our sense of who we are, and of what we mean by taking moral responsibility for our actions?

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

  • Seen how Milton draws on philosophical and theological traditions in his representation of the human capacity for making choices which are contrary to our own true interests.
  • Understood and assessed Milton’s depiction in Paradise Lost of the motivations of, and culpability for, the respective Falls of Adam and Eve.
  • Discussed Milton’s representation in the poem of the respective duties and capacities of men and women, with reference to the concepts of misogyny, obedience and freedom.

 

Week 5 - Redemption:  Milton on Getting it Right (Paradise Lost, Books 10 – 12)

Purpose

  • This week we will focus on some of the questions that Milton grapples with in the final three books of Paradise Lost, as his story explores the question of what happens to Adam and Eve, and to humanity at large, after the Fall.  These questions include:  How can we recover from our mistakes, above all from the kind of really disastrous choices that upend our whole lives?  And how can we make amends for wrong choices that seriously harm not only ourselves but others ― often the very ones we love most?  Finally, how can we, so full of failings as we are, come together to work for our collective good and to extract ourselves from a long legacy of mutual harm? 
  • This last phase of the story of Paradise Lost is crucial for Milton’s purposes, because in it he deals directly with the human situation not in a hypothetically pristine original state, but as we find ourselves today in lived experience ― that is, immersed in world full of hardships and a society replete with injustices, and each burdened with the knowledge of being far from perfect in our thoughts or deeds.
  • There are two main aspects of this last phase of the story to consider.  One concerns the personal level at which Adam and Eve have to find again their respect and care for themselves and for one another after the calamitous choices that have nearly ruined them.  The other, conveyed through a vision shown to Adam outlining the future of the human race, takes in the wider social dimension of human relations as well, and thereby returns us, from another angle, to the political questions with which we began the course.
  • This week we will also revisit other themes explored during the course in light of the poem’s concluding books.  Notably, here is where Milton’s distinctive conception of what it really means to be a Christian is most clearly expressed ― a conception which hinges on the idea of human freedom, and which helps to lay the ground for much subsequent ethical thought, both Christian and secular.  We will also return at the end to the question of who the hero of Milton’s epic poem is… and perhaps discover a surprising answer.

Learning outcomes

By studying this week the students should have:

  • Explored in detail Milton’s depiction of the conditions of human life, and of moral choice, after the Fall.
  • Considered the poem’s place and influence in the history of Western moral thought.
  • Gained further insight into the topics addressed in earlier weeks, in particular by seeing how the end of the poem deals with questions of political and religious freedom,  the nature of Christianity and interpretation of the Bible, and the meaning of heroism.

Week 6 - What Next?

Purpose

  • Assessment of student learning
  • Assessment of student satisfaction
  • Encouragement of further study

Each week of an online course is roughly equivalent to 2-3 hours of classroom time. On top of this, participants should expect to spend roughly 2-3 hours reading material, etc., although this will vary from person to person.

While they have a specific start and end date and will follow a weekly schedule (for example, week 1 will cover topic A, week 2 will cover topic B), our tutor-led online courses are designed to be flexible and as such would normally not require participants to be online for a specific day of the week or time of the day (although some tutors may try to schedule times where participants can be online together for web seminars, which will be recorded so that those who are unable to be online at certain times are able to access material).

Unless otherwise stated, all course material will be posted on the Virtual Learning Environment (VLE) so that they can be accessed at any time throughout the duration of the course and interaction with your tutor and fellow participants will take place through a variety of different ways which will allow for both synchronous and asynchronous learning (discussion boards,etc).

Certificate of Participation

A Certificate of Participation will be awarded to participants who contribute constructively to weekly discussions and exercises/assignments for the duration of the course.

What our students say:

"Paul's presentation lectures were excellent, but most of all, his guidance and responses on the discussion threads was marvellous. Very generous in time and energy, enthusiastic responses to and further shepherding of our discussion. Really excellent"

"Paul was an excellent tutor on this course. Clearly loves his subject. Enthusiastic, warm, and encouraging but at the same time gently challenging us to go further and think deeper. Paul seemed to have endless energy in his involvement in the many threads of thought that developed. I felt as though he respected and valued all course members and their contributions. Paul made the course a very positive experience. Would very much like to study with him again if I get the opportunity"

"The content  was excellent - encyclopedically wide presentation and context-setting, and superb guidance and response on the discussion threads"

 

Terms and Conditions and ICE Fee Information and Refund Policy

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