Harvard Online
Electron transport chain
updated
Designed for individuals and teams, this Harvard Online course taught by preeminent Harvard Professor Mahzarin Banaji teaches the science of implicit bias and strategies to counter the impact of bias in the workplace.
Learn more and apply: https://harvardx.link/bdsgyt
This conversation will feature Harvard Business School Professor Leemore Dafny and Harvard Medical School Professor Michael Chernew, and will be moderated by Maximilian Pany, MD-PhD Candidate in Health Policy at Harvard University.
This conversation will feature Innovations in Teamwork for Health Care instructors, Harvard Business School Professor Amy Edmondson and Harvard’s T.H. Chan School of Public Health Assistant Professor Michaela Kerrissey, and will be moderated by Derrick Bransby, PhD Candidate in Health Policy.
While other businesses may organize around a functional area or project, allowing team members to learn each other's working styles and strengths over time, health care workers often find themselves in ad hoc scenarios, coordinating with near-strangers on life and death situations. As a leader, how do you encourage trust and meet shared goals when teams are formed quickly? How do you strengthen flexibility and collaboration even as team membership and structures fluctuate across departments?
In Innovations in Teamwork for Health Care, leaders in the field of organizational behavior and teamwork, Amy Edmondson, Professor at Harvard Business School, and Michaela Kerrissey, Assistant Professor at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, share their latest research and present their concept of "teaming" as it relates to the health care and life science industries.
Ultimately, this course provides you with the tools needed to implement effective teaming strategies for patient-centered care and provides your organization with a framework to empower robust communication, improve efficiency, and elevate patient safety.
Don’t leave teaming up to chance. Create better teamwork through science.
Learn more: https://www.harvardonline.harvard.edu/course/innovations-teamwork-health-care
Read the full blog post on The Benefits and Limitations of Generative AI: Harvard Experts Answer Your Questions: https://www.harvardonline.harvard.edu/blog/benefits-limitations-generative-ai
Read the full blog post on The Benefits and Limitations of Generative AI: Harvard Experts Answer Your Questions: https://www.harvardonline.harvard.edu/blog/benefits-limitations-generative-ai
Read the full blog post on The Benefits and Limitations of Generative AI: Harvard Experts Answer Your Questions: https://www.harvardonline.harvard.edu/blog/benefits-limitations-generative-ai
Rebecca Nesson, Dean for Academic Programs at the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, states, “The ability to creatively use these tools is the fundamental challenge for all of us. If we don’t transform education in a way that helps our students, then we’re not succeeding as educators.”
She goes on to share what particularly excites her about the opportunity to integrate generative AI into classroom instruction and pedagogy.
Read the full blog post on The Benefits and Limitations of Generative AI: Harvard Experts Answer Your Questions: https://www.harvardonline.harvard.edu/blog/benefits-limitations-generative-ai
Read the full blog post on The Benefits and Limitations of Generative AI: Harvard Experts Answer Your Questions: https://www.harvardonline.harvard.edu/blog/benefits-limitations-generative-ai
STRATEGY EXECUTION FOR PUBLIC LEADERSHIP
Online Certificate Course
Join Harvard Kennedy School faculty and former Pentagon Chief of Staff Eric Rosenbach to learn how to develop strategies for public leadership success.
Learn more: https://www.harvardonline.harvard.edu/course/strategy-execution-public-leadership
==========
How do you execute a strategic initiative that has a long-lasting impact? Do you know how to effectively communicate your strategic approach, gathering input and support from key stakeholders? When your decision is scrutinized by shareholders, media, and the public, how do you anticipate the feedback and manage the delivery?
Public sector leaders face unique challenges when it comes to making strategic business decisions. If not thoroughly planned and executed, these decisions have real consequences with high stake outcomes. What can we learn from world leaders and experts in the public sector that had to make these monumental decisions? And, how can you create a high performing team to successfully execute strategic ideas?
In Strategy Execution for Public Leadership, former Pentagon Chief of Staff and Assistant Secretary of Defense for Homeland Defense and Global Security Eric Rosenbach will lead you through real-life public sector challenges to illustrate how purposefully developed public strategies lead to long-term adoption and success.
By studying decisions of key public leaders, like Former United States Secretary of Defense Ash Carter, you will better understand how to develop strategies that not only align with your organizational goals, but also gain insight into the challenges and scrutiny that come along with making public decisions. Too often, public strategies fail because leaders don’t think about execution, which is made up of leadership and management tools, as well as a team who anticipates all scenarios prior to putting your plan into place. Through global case studies and protagonist examples, you will explore topics that set you on a path to strengthen your public leadership, including resource and budget planning, talent recruitment and retention, strategic communications and crisis management, and risk planning and mitigation tactics.
By the end of this course, you will not only have the tools to create a sound public strategy, but also know how to test and optimize your strategy, increase competitive advantage, and sustain long-term impact and success.
Strategy is not one-size-fits-all. Implement a public leadership approach for long-term success.roll out new initiatives and anticipate shareholder and media feedback
Learn more: https://www.harvardonline.harvard.edu/course/strategy-execution-public-leadership
STRATEGY EXECUTION FOR PUBLIC LEADERSHIP
Online Certificate Course
Join Harvard Kennedy School faculty and former Pentagon Chief of Staff Eric Rosenbach to learn how to develop strategies for public leadership success.
Learn more: https://www.harvardonline.harvard.edu/course/strategy-execution-public-leadership
==========
How do you execute a strategic initiative that has a long-lasting impact? Do you know how to effectively communicate your strategic approach, gathering input and support from key stakeholders? When your decision is scrutinized by shareholders, media, and the public, how do you anticipate the feedback and manage the delivery?
Public sector leaders face unique challenges when it comes to making strategic business decisions. If not thoroughly planned and executed, these decisions have real consequences with high stake outcomes. What can we learn from world leaders and experts in the public sector that had to make these monumental decisions? And, how can you create a high performing team to successfully execute strategic ideas?
In Strategy Execution for Public Leadership, former Pentagon Chief of Staff and Assistant Secretary of Defense for Homeland Defense and Global Security Eric Rosenbach will lead you through real-life public sector challenges to illustrate how purposefully developed public strategies lead to long-term adoption and success.
By studying decisions of key public leaders, like Former United States Secretary of Defense Ash Carter, you will better understand how to develop strategies that not only align with your organizational goals, but also gain insight into the challenges and scrutiny that come along with making public decisions. Too often, public strategies fail because leaders don’t think about execution, which is made up of leadership and management tools, as well as a team who anticipates all scenarios prior to putting your plan into place. Through global case studies and protagonist examples, you will explore topics that set you on a path to strengthen your public leadership, including resource and budget planning, talent recruitment and retention, strategic communications and crisis management, and risk planning and mitigation tactics.
By the end of this course, you will not only have the tools to create a sound public strategy, but also know how to test and optimize your strategy, increase competitive advantage, and sustain long-term impact and success.
Strategy is not one-size-fits-all. Implement a public leadership approach for long-term success.roll out new initiatives and anticipate shareholder and media feedback
Learn more: https://www.harvardonline.harvard.edu/course/strategy-execution-public-leadership
Apply Now: https://harvardx.link/tap
When studying the Jewish Bible and other historical works, the physical attributes—the form of the writing, whether it be scroll, codex, or simply a printed page layout, in addition to the size and shape—determine how we read the book and understand its meaning. Whether you are interested in literature or history, ancient or religious art and texts, or looking to deepen your understanding of religion and its impact on the world, this course will delve deeper into the Jewish Book as a physical object and spark desire to learn more about the materials as both artifact and religious content — enriching your understanding of the Jewish Bible, how it came to be, and its place today in a digital age.
In The Jewish Bible: Its History as a Physical Artifact, you will focus largely on the Torah Scroll—elaborate, handwritten scrolls that share the first five books of Moses, the first books of the Jewish Bible. The physical Torah has been a revered part of the Jewish community for centuries; there is even a tradition of touching the Torah as it is brought around the congregation as a sign of respect and paying homage to its history. In this course you will learn about the birth of the scrolls; their evolution from scrolls to codex; and the Jewish Bible through culture, history, and religion.
By exploring the ancient Hebrew Bibles that Jews have held in their hands, chanted in the synagogue, and studied in school and at home, you will be immersed in the history of the book as an artifact of other religions, and how Jews transformed the Bible over centuries using cultural and religious context. As you study the Bible as a physical book, you will learn how the materiality of the Jewish Book serves as an interface between the Hebrew text, history, and the modern world.
Learn more: edx.org/course/the-jewish-bible
In Reducing Racial Disparities in Health Care, you will not only examine the disparities that exist when serving a diverse population, but also approach each inequity head-on to learn more about the causes and how to eliminate these issues. By focusing on data collection and performance measurements unique to your organization, you will identify how core issues in care quality of ethnic and racial minority groups, which are often multifactorial in nature, contribute to poorer health outcomes, lead to higher costs, and exemplify low-value health care.
Offered in conjunction with the Disparities Solutions Center at Massachusetts General Hospital, this course will use real-world examples, case studies, and insights from leaders in the field to help you digest the latest in understanding racial disparities in health care — allowing you to create strategic approaches that you can apply to your organization. You will learn how to harness and analyze data, how to visualize and communicate the results, and use feedback from stakeholders to begin closing the gap.
Remove racial biases and barriers. Improve equality in health care.
Learn more and enroll: harvardonline.harvard.edu/course/reducing-racial-disparities-health-care
With a focus on proven psychology philosophies and science-driven skills to overcome challenges, Building Personal Resilience: Managing Anxiety and Mental Health breaks down five core components to creating better stress management habits. A practical overview of Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) will give you a foundation for building your resilient skillset. By recognizing your own cycle of thoughts, emotions, and behaviors (TEB), you will be able to shift your perspective. To infuse energy back into a lackluster day, a “Charge Up Plan” will be the resource you can call on. When life feels scary, there are too many choices, and you’re tempted by avoidance, you will know the exact steps to face your fears and a dependable method for problem solving.
We all face challenging decisions and experience stressful situations at some point in our lives. Building mental strength and personal resilience is possible when you focus on implementing simple but powerful tools in your everyday life.
Become your most resilient self with Building Personal Resilience: Managing Anxiety and Mental Health.
Learn more: https://www.harvardonline.harvard.edu/building-personal-resilience
In Reducing Racial Disparities in Health Care, you will not only examine the disparities that exist when serving a diverse population, but also approach each inequity head-on to learn more about the causes and how to eliminate these issues. By focusing on data collection and performance measurements unique to your organization, you will identify how core issues in care quality of ethnic and racial minority groups, which are often multifactorial in nature, contribute to poorer health outcomes, lead to higher costs, and exemplify low-value health care.
Offered in conjunction with the Disparities Solutions Center at Massachusetts General Hospital, this course will use real-world examples, case studies, and insights from leaders in the field to help you digest the latest in understanding racial disparities in health care — allowing you to create strategic approaches that you can apply to your organization. You will learn how to harness and analyze data, how to visualize and communicate the results, and use feedback from stakeholders to begin closing the gap.
Remove racial biases and barriers. Improve equality in health care.
Learn more and enroll: https://www.harvardonline.harvard.edu/course/reducing-racial-disparities-health-care
STRATEGY EXECUTION FOR PUBLIC LEADERSHIP
Online Certificate Course
Join Harvard Kennedy School faculty and former Pentagon Chief of Staff Eric Rosenbach to learn how to develop strategies for public leadership success.
Learn more: https://www.harvardonline.harvard.edu/course/strategy-execution-public-leadership
==========
How do you execute a strategic initiative that has a long-lasting impact? Do you know how to effectively communicate your strategic approach, gathering input and support from key stakeholders? When your decision is scrutinized by shareholders, media, and the public, how do you anticipate the feedback and manage the delivery?
Public sector leaders face unique challenges when it comes to making strategic business decisions. If not thoroughly planned and executed, these decisions have real consequences with high stake outcomes. What can we learn from world leaders and experts in the public sector that had to make these monumental decisions? And, how can you create a high performing team to successfully execute strategic ideas?
In Strategy Execution for Public Leadership, former Pentagon Chief of Staff and Assistant Secretary of Defense for Homeland Defense and Global Security Eric Rosenbach will lead you through real-life public sector challenges to illustrate how purposefully developed public strategies lead to long-term adoption and success.
By studying decisions of key public leaders, like Former United States Secretary of Defense Ash Carter, you will better understand how to develop strategies that not only align with your organizational goals, but also gain insight into the challenges and scrutiny that come along with making public decisions. Too often, public strategies fail because leaders don’t think about execution, which is made up of leadership and management tools, as well as a team who anticipates all scenarios prior to putting your plan into place. Through global case studies and protagonist examples, you will explore topics that set you on a path to strengthen your public leadership, including resource and budget planning, talent recruitment and retention, strategic communications and crisis management, and risk planning and mitigation tactics.
By the end of this course, you will not only have the tools to create a sound public strategy, but also know how to test and optimize your strategy, increase competitive advantage, and sustain long-term impact and success.
Strategy is not one-size-fits-all. Implement a public leadership approach for long-term success.roll out new initiatives and anticipate shareholder and media feedback
Learn more: https://www.harvardonline.harvard.edu/course/strategy-execution-public-leadership
Data science is an ever-evolving field, using algorithms and scientific methods to parse complex data sets. Data scientists use a range of programming languages, such as Python and R, to harness and analyze data. This course focuses on using Python in data science. By the end of the course, you’ll have a fundamental understanding of machine learning models and basic concepts around Machine Learning (ML) and Artificial Intelligence (AI).
Using Python, learners will study regression models (Linear, Multilinear, and Polynomial) and classification models (kNN, Logistic), utilizing popular libraries such as sklearn, Pandas, matplotlib, and numPy. The course will cover key concepts of machine learning such as: picking the right complexity, preventing overfitting, regularization, assessing uncertainty, weighing trade-offs, and model evaluation. Participation in this course will build your confidence in using Python, preparing you for more advanced study in Machine Learning (ML) and Artificial Intelligence (AI), and advancement in your career.
Learners must have a minimum baseline of programming knowledge (preferably in Python) and statistics in order to be successful in this course. Python prerequisites can be met with an introductory Python course offered through CS50’s Introduction to Programming with Python, and statistics prerequisites can be met via Fat Chance or with Stat110 offered through HarvardX.
Learn more: https://www.harvardonline.harvard.edu
Computation is changing the very nature of how we do research in the humanities. Tools from data science can help you to explore the record of human culture in ways that just wouldn’t have been possible before. You’re more likely to reach out to others, to work across disciplines, and to assemble teams. Whether you're a student wanting to expand your skillset, a librarian supporting new modes of research, or a journalist who has just received a massive cache of leaked e-mails, this course will show you how to draw insights from thousands of documents at once. You will learn how, with a few simple lines of code, to make use of the metadata—the information about our objects of study—to zero in on what matters most, and visualize your results so that you can understand them at a glance.
In this course, you’ll work on building parts of a search engine, one tailor-made to the needs of academic research. Along the way, you'll learn the fundamentals of text analysis: a set of techniques for manipulating the written word that stand at the core of the digital humanities.
By the end of the course, you will be able to apply what you learn to what interests you most, be it contemporary speeches, journalism, caselaw, and even art objects. This course will analyze samples of 18th-century literature as the basis analysis, showing you how these methods can be applied to philosophical works, religious texts, political and historical records – material from across the spectrum of humanistic inquiry.
Combine your literary research with data science to find answers in ways you never expected.
Learn more: https://www.harvardonline.harvard.edu
Learn more with Open Innovation. https://harvardx.link/inno
Learn more with Open Innovation. https://harvardx.link/inno
Learn more: https://harvardx.link/hcstyt
From start-ups to multinational brands, learn how to meet the needs of your growing organization with Open Innovation.
Learn more with Open Innovation. https://harvardx.link/inno
Learn more about Open Innovation: https://harvardx.link/inno
Learn more with Open Innovation. https://harvardx.link/inno
Learn more with Open Innovation. https://harvardx.link/inno
Learn more about the next session of Open Innovation: https://harvardx.link/hyve
Start your journey with Managing Happiness and enroll: https://harvardx.link/happyyt
Start your journey with Managing Happiness and enroll: https://harvardx.link/happyyt
Start your journey with Managing Happiness and enroll: https://harvardx.link/happyyt
Start your journey with Managing Happiness and enroll: https://harvardx.link/happyyt
Start your journey and enroll: https://harvardx.link/happyyt
Learn more: https://harvardx.link/dspyt
Learn more: https://harvardx.link/dsfbyt
Learn more: https://harvardx.link/dpatyt
Learn more: https://harvardx.link/fvyt
Learn more about Health Care Economics: https://harvardx.link/14
Learn more about Digital Health: https://harvardx.link/dtcy
Learn more about Open Innovation: https://harvardx.link/inno
https://harvardx.link/-
https://harvardx.link/chemx
bit.ly/3cJo85Y
https://harvardx.link/malx
Learn more: https://harvardx.link/hcec-yt
Taught by Harvard Medical School faculty, Health Care Economics, a Harvard Online course, provides insights into the interactions between industries in the US health care sector and teaches what economic forces are shaping health care.