John Hopkins University offers dozens of free health-related courses as a part of its OpenCourseWare collection. Students can use OpenCourseWare material such as syllabi, lecture notes, and reading schedules to study topics such as nutrition and mental health. These are the same materials used in traditional courses offered at the renowned John Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
Like other OpenCourseWare initiatives, the courses available through John Hopkins do not provide interaction with instructors and cannot be used to earn college credit. They are designed for self-study.
Like other OpenCourseWare initiatives, the courses available through John Hopkins do not provide interaction with instructors and cannot be used to earn college credit. They are designed for self-study.
To the free course by Johns Hopkins University, The History of Public Health. To find more open educational resources from JHSPH, please visit JHSPH.
Where to Find John Hopkins OpenCourseWare:
All free online classes can be found on the John Hopkins Bloomberg OpenCourseWare website.
How to Use John Hopkins OpenCourseWare:
Most John Hopkins OpenCourseWare classes contain a brief overview in the lecture notes, not an entire transcript. Since the lecture notes are limited, you may want to consider acquiring the suggested reading materials and following the syllabus to get a more complete understanding of the subject.
Most lecture notes and readings must be downloaded to your computer in PDF format. If you don’t have a PDF reader, you may download one from Adobe for no cost.
Most lecture notes and readings must be downloaded to your computer in PDF format. If you don’t have a PDF reader, you may download one from Adobe for no cost.
Top Free Online Classes from John Hopkins University:
Self-learners have dozens of John Hopkins OpenCourseWare classes to choose from. Popular general interest courses include:
Critical Analysis of Popular Diets and Dietary Supplements
Critical Analysis of Popular Diets and Dietary Supplements
– An overview of scientifically proven weight-loss strategies preparing learners to analyze diet plans.
Environmental Health
Environmental Health
– A survey of health issues in relation to the environment.
Family Planning Policies and Programs
Family Planning Policies and Programs
– An explanation of family planning issues in developing countries. Students studying these materials study family planning as a human rights issue and learn how programs are implemented in poverty-stricken areas.
LONDON, January 15, 2019 /PRNewswire/ --
Online social learning platform FutureLearn is offering a new online course educating practitioners in The Monday Campaigns, a non-profit public health initiative that encourages individuals and organisations to commit to healthy behaviors that can reduce the incidence of preventable diseases. The online course has been developed by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.
The Monday Campaigns offers free, evidence-based health promotion resources that provide the sustainable motivation that can lead to life-long behavior change. Researchers at Johns Hopkins have found that people view Monday as a fresh start and are more likely to engage in healthy behaviors on Monday than any other day. And those that start the week off healthy are more likely to maintain the healthy behavior throughout the week. The campaign has dubbed Monday as 'the day all health breaks loose', and fosters the spread of the concept by providing creative materials, case studies and ready-to-scale programs that harness the best practices of marketing and promotion.
Each week on the new FutureLearn course, The Monday Campaigns: Lessons in Public Health Promotion, a different Monday campaign is profiled with a corresponding case study from a community-based partner. Initiatives include 'Meatless Monday', a practice that encourages consumers to reduce their meat consumption every week, and 'Move it Monday', which offers simple workouts, tips and inspiration. 'DeStress Monday' is also featured, offering guided, evidence-based body & mind practices, which include stress reduction techniques of yoga, deep breathing, mindfulness and positive affirmations, and Quit and Stay Quit Monday, which promotes smoking cessation using a periodic Monday cue.
The course, which is currently open for enrollment, provides practitioners with the skills and tools needed to help prevent chronic diseases by integrating The Monday Campaigns into the programmes they offer. Taught by faculty from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, the course empowers learners to design, implement, promote, and evaluate programmes that tackle the most pressing health issues in their communities. The goal is to help them understand health behavior theories and why people make the decisions they do, and ultimately implement health programmes that leverage periodic cues to benefit their communities.
The course is open to all learners. A background in public health promotion is not required. However, the course may be of particular interest to public health and other professionals working in a variety of communities or organizations, such as schools, governments, worksites, parks, or faith-based groups.
The Monday Campaigns was founded by Sid Lerner, a former advertising executive, in association with Johns Hopkins, Columbia and Syracuse Universities in order to address the epidemic of preventable diseases brought on by unhealthy lifestyles. The first initiative, Meatless Monday, was launched in 2003 and has since been adopted by a range of participants, from grassroots advocates and chefs to large food companies - in over 40 countries across the globe. Other successful campaigns followed, addressing smoking cessation, nutrition, physical activity, and stress management - all using a weekly cue and Monday 'fresh start' mindset to motivate healthy behaviors from week-to-week.
To learn more, visit: www.mondaycampaigns.org
Mark Lester, MD, Universities and Educational Partnerships, FutureLearn, said: 'The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health is a world renowned institution and to be working with the School's researchers on The Monday Campaigns broadens the reach of this initiative and gives us the opportunity to make a positive difference in many people's lives around the globe.
'While the campaign was born in America, the lessons have universal applications. By the end of the course, student participants will be able to articulate the importance of community-based health campaigns and utilise lessons learned from the course to create campaigns that address their own community-level health challenges. It's a very important mission and we're proud to be a part of it.'
The Monday Campaigns: Lessons in Public Health Promotion is open for enrolment now and begins February 11, 2019.
About FutureLearn:www.futurelearn.com
FutureLearn is a leading social learning platform formed in December 2012 by The Open University and is now the largest online learning platform in Europe with over eight million people signed up worldwide. FutureLearn uses design, technology and partnerships to create enjoyable, credible and flexible online courses as well as undergraduate and postgraduate degrees that improve working lives. It partners with over a quarter of the world's top universities, as well as organisations such as Accenture, the British Council, CIPD, Raspberry Pi and the Health Education England (HEE). It's also involved in government-backed initiatives to address skills gaps such as The Institute of Coding and the National Centre for Computing Education.
SOURCE FutureLearn