UC Berkeley offers courses and symposia through Google Video

September 27, 2006
UC Berkeley offers courses and symposia through Google Video

UC Berkeley's page on the Google Video website features links to top courses, campus events and symposia.

In another innovative move to share its intellectual treasures with the public, the University of California, Berkeley, announced today that it is delivering educational content, including course lectures and symposia, free of charge through Google Video.

Because of the quality and quantity of these video offerings, UC Berkeley will be the first university with its own page on the Google Video Web site: http://video.googl … m/ucberkeley , campus officials said. The campus is making more than 250 hours of content available to the public through Google Video.

"Google appreciates the opportunity to partner with progressive universities like UC Berkeley to make undiscovered lectures and entire courses available to our users," said Eric Schmidt, chief executive officer of Google, who received both his doctoral degree (1982) and master's degree (1979) from UC Berkeley. "UC Berkeley's content - much of which wasn't easily accessible online - will enhance the comprehensive and diverse range of offerings by Google Video."

Visitors to the new UC Berkeley Web page will be able to view or download a half dozen UC Berkeley courses in their entirety, including "Physics for Future Presidents, "Integrative Biology," and "Search Engines: Technology, Society and Business." Also offered will be a wide range of public events and cutting-edge symposia on everything from climate change to synthetic biology. The campus is set to add further content to the Google Video site in coming months.

This collaboration also strengthens UC Berkeley's position as a leader in knowledge-sharing through open-access online video, campus officials said.

"Google Video presents us with a wonderful opportunity to share UC Berkeley's amazing faculty with a global community of lifelong learners," said Christina Maslach, UC Berkeley vice provost for undergraduate education. "We see this endeavor as one part of our expanding digital bridge that is directly connecting the public we serve with the intellectual riches of the campus."

"Coursecasting" is a growing trend in educational technology, enabling students and the general public to download audio and video recordings of class lectures to their computers and portable media devices. As with UC Berkeley's agreement to deliver podcasts through Apple Computer's iTunes U, the content made available via Google Video will consist mostly of recorded course lectures and special campus events.

Keeping ahead of coursecasting technology, UC Berkeley has been making academic content available to the public since 2001, when its Educational Technology Services (ETS) division began webcasting lectures and special events to students and the public through its Web site. That site will continue to host the full array of the campus's growing inventory of video content supplied by taped events and lecture rooms that are wired for automated webcasting.

"Google Video is a wonderful extension of our open video program," said Obadiah Greenberg, ETS product manager for webcast.berkeley. "The ability of viewers to play back video on a variety of devices; the ease of sharing and embedding videos via e-mail and blogs; and access to community aspects such as user ratings and comments help us to broaden our reach and build community around our video."

Google Video will also make it much easier for the public to access content from UC Berkeley's own Web sites by embedding Google Video's proprietary player that uses the Flash plug-in to stream video. When viewers come to a UC Berkeley page, the video will play without the need to launch or download a special application.

"Before the advent of broadband, only our students or those fortunate enough to attend campus events were able to reap the rewards," said Dan Mogulof, UC Berkeley's executive director of Public Affairs and Google Video project manager. "Now, through our collaboration with Google Video, we can more easily share those resources and bring extraordinary value to the people of California, the taxpayers who help support our institution. This is a perfect example of how technology is expanding our idea of what it means to be a truly public university."

UC Berkeley's arrangement with Google Video is the result of discussions initiated last summer by the campus's Public Affairs office. The Google Video team was led by Philip Inghelbrecht, an alumnus of the Haas School of Business.

"One of the hardest things for me while attending Haas School was choosing classes. The curriculum and professors are so impressive that I always had to make sacrifices when selecting classes," said Inghelbrecht, strategic partner development manager for Google Video. "The relationship between UC Berkeley and Google Video was born from my own experience. Now that many UC Berkeley classes are available on Google Video, we may never have to miss out on a class or professor again."

Google Video partner manager Margaret Healy, also a UC Berkeley alumna, agreed: "I know how my Berkeley education shaped how I view the world, and now more people will be able to have the Berkeley experience. Move over Fox News- now people can watch "Physics for Future Presidents" on Google Video," Healy said.

Source: UC Berkeley

3.2 /5 (46 votes)  

Rank 3.2 /5 (46 votes)
Tags

Related Stories
Relevant PhysicsForums posts
  • Strange indexing in Fortran Code
    created6 hours ago
  • Car Port post load calculation
    created8 hours ago
  • attempting to spin-cast parabola
    created18 hours ago
  • Flow around a reducing bend - effect on pumping work
    createdFeb 06, 2012
  • Formula for deflection of 6061 T6 hollow tube, please help.
    createdFeb 06, 2012
  • Help to make a Unit Hydrograph of Reservoir Level - Storage Curve for a Dam
    createdFeb 06, 2012
  • More from Physics Forums - General Engineering

More news stories

2.1 million viewers live stream Super Bowl online

(AP) -- The first live stream of the Super Bowl drew 2.1 million unique viewers, NBC said Thursday.

Technology / Internet

created 55 minutes ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 1

Japan electronic giants eye chip merger: reports

Three of Japan's biggest electronics companies are to join forces in a chip-making venture, according to reports, days after a swathe of dire results from a sector struggling to compete globally.

Technology / Business

created 33 minutes ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0

Hundreds of gamers flock to Brazil tech fest

Hundreds of geeks and gamers braved Sao Paulo's torrid heat Tuesday to play online video games at the fifth edition of Brazil's Campus Party, an annual, week-long technology fest.

Technology / Software

created 13 minutes ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0

Baseball legend fields fantasy world video game

Electronic Arts has released a much-anticipated "Kingdoms of Amalur: Reckoning" video game created by an all-star team put together by World Series champion pitcher Curt Schilling.

Technology / Software

created 50 minutes ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0

Samsung says to sell 25 mln 'smart TVs' this year

South Korea's Samsung Electronics said on Wednesday it plans to sell more than 25 million "smart TVs" this year as it tries to capture the emerging Internet TV market eyed by competitors including Apple.

Technology / Business

created 3 minutes ago | popularity not rated yet | comments 0


Scared of a younger rival? Not for some male songbirds

When mature male white-crowned sparrows duel to win a mate or a nesting territory, a young bird just doesn't get much respect.

Tiny primate 'talks' in ultrasound

One of the world's smallest primates, the Philippine tarsier, communicates in a range of ultrasound inaudible to predator and prey alike, according to a study published on Wednesday.

Preventing bacteria from falling in with the wrong crowd could help stop gum disease

Stripping some mouth bacteria of their access key to gangs of other pathogenic oral bacteria could help prevent gum disease and tooth loss. The study, published in the journal Microbiology suggests that t ...

New study sheds light on genetics of rice metabolism

A large-scale study analyzing metabolic compounds in rice grains conducted by researchers at the RIKEN Plant Science Center (PSC) and their collaborators has identified 131 rice metabolites and clarified the ...

Study examines role of bilingualism in children's development

A new study on children who are raised bilingual examined the effects on children's development of growing up speaking two languages. The study found that different factors were responsible for the language- and non-language-related ...

Getting caffeine fix as easy as taking deep breath

(AP) -- Move over, coffee and Red Bull. A Harvard professor thinks the next big thing will be people inhaling their caffeine from a lipstick-sized tube. Critics say the novel product is not without its risks.