Are there geology MOOCs anywhere? Every time I go looking I find at most like three but one's in Chinese (which I don't know nearly well enough to take a course in), one's some advanced thing, and the other... I don't even remember.
Anyway, is there anywhere I could possibly peek into a course like... Rocks an' Whatnot 101 maybe? Dirt Stuff for People with Clean Hands, maybe? :'D I can't promise I won't end up disinterested or get bored or distracted and quit, but I want such courses to be a thing anyway.
Is that a farting tomato? ... Is that a farting rock?!? Thanks, I guess? 🤣
I just find it annoying that I can take roughly six thousand courses on Python at the same time but couldn't pay somebody (not that I would <.< ) to talk about dirt. Seems like a super obvious hole in the offerings of Coursera, edX... oh, maybe I should check MIT's new thing.
Admittedly, it's much easier to teach python digitally, because the hands on portion happens on a computer. For a proper geology education, you will eventually need real samples in your hands, in instruments, etc. So while a first year Rocks 101 course is probably doable online, it gets harder as the material delves deeper.
It'd be neat to offer an online course with a rocks and minerals package that gets shipped to the customer -- say an assortment of common rocks, and the 30 most common minerals or something.
Also, it's not farting! It's flying through the air really quickly! Like a thrown tomato. It's so hard to do physical comedy with emojis these days ;)
Oooh, feel free to dump thoughts in this community if you're building a curriculum. I'll happily pretend I'm in undergrad again and ask dumb questions. :)
What is rock? Is rock different from stone? If a recipe calls for "three small pebbles" do they have to be roughly the same size and shape or...? 🤔Hehehe.