University of Michigan’s Online Courses on Art and Culture 2024-2025

Opportunity Detail

  • Language Requirement Not required
  • Gender MaleFemale
  • Level Non-Degree /Short program
  • Eligible Region/Countries

    International

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  • Medium of Instruction English
  • Opportunity ID 47215
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Opportunity Description

The University of Michigan is a Michigan public research university located in Ann Arbor, Michigan. The University of Michigan’s mission is to serve the people of Michigan and the rest of the world by being a leader in the creation, dissemination, preservation, and application of knowledge, art, and academic values, as well as in the design of leaders and citizens who will enrich the present and challenge the future.

Various courses are offered by the University of Michigan in various divisions. A course offered by the University of Michigan is titled “Art and Culture,” and it covers a variety of topics. which follows with an explanation:

1: Personnel Management for Public Libraries (Online Course):

This course, which is a component of the Public Library Management Professional Certificate program, will examine the abilities required for selecting and assessing staff in order to represent your library’s goal via an effective organizational culture. The legal factors to be taken into account while managing a diverse workforce will be clear to learners.

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Important Details:

  • Subject: ARTS & CULTURE
  • Language: English
  • Duration: 4 weeks
  • Instructor: Josie Barnes Parker

You Will Learn:

  • Culture inside the organization from the HR standpoint
  • How job descriptions should be written and assessed
  • A fundamental knowledge of the Federal and State hiring legislation
  • How to assess employment costs and create a budget
  • How to ascertain whether the organizational chart’s staffing priorities are supported by the budget
  • How to draft and apply performance assessments
  • How to determine the necessary regulations to support a competitive and healthy hiring environment

2: Infrastructure Management for Public Libraries (Online Course):

In this course, which is a part of the Public Library Management Professional Certificate program, they will look at the ongoing infrastructure support that library executives need to provide, including: technology, budgets, policies, contract services, insurance, maintenance, and patron privacy.
You’ll learn how decisions are made to ensure sustainability over the long run.

Important Details:

  • Subject: ARTS & CULTURE
  • Language: English
  • Duration: 4 weeks
  • Instructor: Josie Barnes Parker

You Will Learn:

  • How to negotiate, sign contracts, and oversee services delivered by outside vendors.
  • How to decide on eRATE for Internet services, technological policies, etc.
  • How to create schedules and budgets for both yearly and long-term maintenance.
  • How a maintenance task should be put out to bid.

3: Seeking Justice: Conversations on Incarceration – Introductory Module (Online Course):

You may discover more about the project’s goals, how to get started, and how to engage with the learning community in this module.

Lessons from the initial teach-out event, which ended on January 1, 2020, have been archived. Although you are free to browse and jump between modules, they advise finishing the lessons in the sequence they are given.

Important Details:

  • Subject: ARTS & CULTURE
  • Language: English
  • Duration: 1 week
  • Lessons: 2 lessons (16 min)
  • Course Document: Introduction, Getting Started, Participating in the Learning Community

4: The Piano Sonata: Origins to Mozart (Online Course):

You will learn about the sonata form in this course, including how it functions, where it originated, and how sonatas are put together as multi-movement pieces. They’ll examine the piano sonata’s early development and identify some of the genre’s key pioneers (Scarlatti, CPE Bach, Haydn, and Mozart). Then you’ll look at the connection between the period’s keyboard instruments and musical genres, and you’ll know the difference between Baroque, Galant, and Classical styles. In order to demonstrate the breadth of the sonata repertory and the instruments that contributed to its history, this course was shot in many venues, including the University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance.

Important Details:

  • Subject: ARTS & CULTURE
  • Language: English
  • Duration: 4 weeks
  • Instructor: Matthew Bengtson

You Will Learn:

  • Recognize the origins and operation of sonata form.
  • Examine the piano sonata’s early history.
  • Distinguish between classical, galant, and baroque styles.

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5: The Piano Sonata: Russian and 20th-21st Century Composers (Online Course):

This course will examine sonata structure and teach you how the piano sonata was revived in the 20th century, with a focus on Russian composers for whom the sonata was a particularly well-liked and lucrative genre. You’ll learn about some of the most significant piano sonatas of the 20th century, including both avant-garde and Neo-Classical works. This course will also introduce you to other lesser-known and more contemporary works, demonstrating how the piano sonata genre is still growing and flourishing. In order to demonstrate the breadth of the sonata repertory and the instruments that contributed to its history, this course was shot in many venues, including the University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance.

Important Details:

  • Subject: ARTS & CULTURE
  • Language: English
  • Duration: 4 weeks
  • Instructor: Matthew Bengtson

You Will Learn:

  • Discover the 20th-century revitalization of the piano sonata.
  • Examine both avant-garde and neo-classical fashions.
  • Examine the compositions of Russian composers like Prokofiev, Scriabin, and Medtner.

6: The Piano Sonata: Beethoven and the Romantics (Online Course):

Learners will examine sonata structure in this course and discover how Ludwig van Beethoven elevated the piano sonata to new heights. Together, they’ll learn how the generation that came after Beethoven understood and used his accomplishments in their own special ways. The “War of the Romantics” will next be discussed, including the many formal forms for Romantic sonatas (both traditional and progressive), as well as the significant repertory of this time period. You’ll hear some of the significant pianos from the era and comprehend the distinctions between the English/French and Viennese traditions of piano music. In order to demonstrate the breadth of the sonata repertory and the instruments that contributed to its history, this course was shot in many venues, including the University of Michigan School of Music, Theatre & Dance.

Important Details

  • Subject: ARTS & CULTURE
  • Language: English
  • Duration: 4 weeks
  • Instructor: Matthew Bengtson

You Will Learn:

  • Discover how Beethoven elevated the piano sonata to new heights.
  • Investigate “War of the Romantics.”
  • Recognize the variations between the English/French and Viennese piano music traditions.

7: Introduction to 3D Modeling (Online Course):

In addition to learning how to use the Rhino program to construct your 3D models, you will also acquire basic design skills that will help you bring your imagination to life in this four-week hands-on course offered by the University of Michigan.

Important Details:

  • Subject: ARTS & CULTURE
  • Language: English
  • Duration: 4 weeks

You Will Learn:

  • Show that you can use the Gumball tool to turn conventional solid models into more complex assemblies and that you can navigate the user interface.
  • Utilize your understanding of Boolean modeling techniques to convert solid objects into subtractive spaces.
  • Show that you can generate and modify 2D line forms.
  • Create flat surfaces and 3D shapes by extruding them.
  • Create repeating 3D tile wall designs and patterned mandalas with transformation and array tools…

8: Black Performance as Social Protest (Online Course)

Globally, Black social activism and performance have served as models for resistance. It has enhanced and sparked calls for justice in a variety of settings. Your awareness of Black performance as social protest and its ongoing influence on protest and performance today will deepen as a result of this course.

Important Details:

  • Subject: ARTS & CULTURE
  • Language: English
  • Duration: 4 weeks

You Will Learn:

  • Determine the ways that historical resistance patterns support current social justice movements.
  • Consider strategies for attaining racial parity in performance.

Other Courses from The University of Michigan

How to Apply?

To apply, you can select the course you want to study and sign up for no cost.

To learn more, kindly visit University of Michigan’s official website.

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