Phillip Long is the associate director in the Office of Educational Innovation and Technology at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and leads the outreach effort projects that emerged from the MIT iCampus project. He is responsible for research and evaluation of innovative uses of technology in the MIT education. He is working to integrate MIT iCampus technologies into the MIT learning experience and support its dissemination to other institutions around the world. His current research interests focus on designing learning spaces to support active learning, emerging technologies and the use of virtual worlds.
Integrative Biology 131: General Human Anatomy. Fall 2005. Professor Marian Diamond. The functional anatomy of the human body as revealed by gross and microscopic examination.
The Department of Integrative Biology offers a program of instruction that focuses on the integration of structure and function in the evolution of diverse biological systems. It investigates integration at all levels of organization from molecules to the biosphere, and in all taxa of organisms from viruses to higher plants and animals.
The department uses many traditional fields and levels of complexity in forging new research directions, asking new questions, and answering traditional questions in new ways. The various...
eCHEM 1A: Online General Chemistry
College of Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley
http://chemistry.berkeley.edu/echem1a
Curriculum and ChemQuizzes developed by Dr. Mark Kubinec and Professor Alexander Pines
Chemical Demonstrations by Lonnie Martin
Video Production by Jon Schainker and Scott Vento
Developed with the support of The Camille & Henry Dreyfus Foundation
A Microbiologist's Intellectual Odyssey
Lucy Shapiro
Director of the Beckman Center for Molecular and Genetic Medicine at Stanford University
Conversations host Harry Kreisler welcomes Lucy Shapiro,Ludwig Professor of Cancer Research in the School of Medicine, Stanford University, for a discussion of her career in the biological sciences. Topics discussed
include unraveling the mystery of bacterial DNA, creativity in the sciences,the interdisciplinary nature of biology, the policy challenges posed by the increasing threat of infectious disease and the diminishing efficacy of antibiotics, and the problem of bioterrorism.
Recorded April 2, 2009
http://globetrotter.berkeley.edu/iis/Kreisler.html
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