At first glance the fields of religion and ecology may seem and unlikely pairing, but a deeper consideration reveals the two have a great deal to contribute to one another and are indeed inextricably linked. Religions recognize the unity and interdependence of humans with nature. Ecological sciences affirm this deep interconnection with the natural world. This partnership can inspire work for the wellbeing of the Earth community

Indigenous Religions & Ecology

Indigenous Religions & Ecology


Instructors: Mary Evelyn Tucker
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Completing Introduction to Religions and Ecology Course
54 reviews
Recommended experience
Recommended experience
Beginner level
Completing Introduction to Religions and Ecology Course
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There are 10 modules in this course
What's included
4 videos7 readings1 discussion prompt1 plugin
4 videos• Total 14 minutes
- Land Acknowledgement - John Grim and Mary Evelyn Tucker • 2 minutes
- Course Overview: Indigenous Religions and Ecology - John Grim and Mary Evelyn Tucker • 3 minutes
- Personal Introduction - Mary Evelyn Tucker• 6 minutes
- Personal Introduction - John Grim• 3 minutes
7 readings• Total 19 minutes
- Course Rationale • 2 minutes
- How this course is organized• 1 minute
- Disclaimer• 10 minutes
- Learn more about your Instructors• 5 minutes
- (Optional) Religion and Ecology Conferences and Book Series, 1996-1998• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: The Promise of Planetary Health • 1 minute
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
1 discussion prompt• Total 5 minutes
- Module 1: Course Introduction• 5 minutes
1 plugin• Total 10 minutes
- The Promise of Planetary Health• 10 minutes
We explore terms and themes in the study of Indigenous religions and ecology. Terms such as Indigeneity, sovereignty, lifeway, cosmovision and cosmopolitics are examined. Underlying themes such as responsibilities, rights and reciprocities with the Earth are highlighted by Native spokespersons. There is an inherent call for interweaving environmental and social justice often referred to as integral ecology.
What's included
3 videos10 readings1 assignment1 discussion prompt3 plugins
3 videos• Total 52 minutes
- Lecture - Overview of the Study of Indigenous Religions and Ecology - John Grim • 16 minutes
- Lecture - Terms and Topics in the Study of Indigenous Religions and Ecology - John Grim• 26 minutes
- Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, “Indigenous Identity, Indigenous Rights, and Forest Protection”• 10 minutes
10 readings• Total 25 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Indigenization”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “The Honorable Harvest”• 1 minute
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Rights and Responsibilities”• 1 minute
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
- UN Declaration of the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (UNDRIP)• 11 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Indigenous Identity, Indigenous Rights, and Forest Protection” • 1 minute
- The Indigenous World• 5 minutes
- Interfaith Rainforest Initiative • 5 minutes
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
1 assignment• Total 10 minutes
- Module 2: Introduction to the Study of Indigenous Religions and Ecology• 10 minutes
1 discussion prompt• Total 5 minutes
- Module 2: Introduction to the Study of Indigenous Religions and Ecology• 5 minutes
3 plugins• Total 12 minutes
- Jeannette Armstrong, “Indigenization” • 2 minutes
- Robin Wall Kimmerer, “The Honorable Harvest”• 4 minutes
- Oren Lyons, “Rights and Responsibilities”• 6 minutes
Settlers and nation-states have used stereotypes to demean, subjugate, and exploit Indigenous peoples, communities, and lands. “Decolonization” is the recognition of this historical distortion and the racism that continues into the present. In light of this reality, “Indigeneity” may be seen as a call to self-discovery necessary for restoring Indigenous voices and sovereignty in decision-making.
What's included
7 videos6 readings1 assignment1 discussion prompt2 plugins
7 videos• Total 104 minutes
- Lecture - From Decolonizing to Restoration: Terms and Topics - John Grim• 12 minutes
- Lecture - From Decolonizing to Restoration: Cosmovision, Spiritual Ecology, and Cosmopolitics - John Grim• 10 minutes
- Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, "Global Indigenous Sovereignty and Environmental Governance." Interview by John Grim• 23 minutes
- Lecture - Lifeway and Symbolic Consciousness - John Grim • 22 minutes
- Lecture - Self-Determination and Sovereignty- John Grim• 6 minutes
- Lecture - Indigenous Ways of Knowing - John Grim• 9 minutes
- Tiokasin Ghosthorse, "Lakota Consciousness and Ecological Relationships." Interview by John Grim• 22 minutes
6 readings• Total 19 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “On Decolonizing Methodologies”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “Global Indigenous Sovereignty and Environmental Governance”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “Brazil’s Indigenous Land is Being Invaded” • 1 minute
- Decolonizing Conquest Consciousness • 15 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Lakota Consciousness and Ecological Relationships” • 1 minute
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
1 assignment• Total 10 minutes
- Module 3: From Decolonization to Restoration in Indigenous Communities• 10 minutes
1 discussion prompt• Total 5 minutes
- Module 3: From Decolonization to Restoration in Indigenous Communities• 5 minutes
2 plugins• Total 28 minutes
- Linda Tuhiwai Smith, “On Decolonizing Methodologies”• 17 minutes
- Brazil’s Indigenous Land is Being Invaded• 11 minutes
Native worldviews and cultural values were undermined by dominant societies. Yet these losses did not fully erase the resilience that has led to recovery of lifeways and traditional knowledge, as described by a Hopi elder. Native peoples in North America have restored relationships with land and seeds, lakes and rivers, animals and biodiversity. This is expressed in ritual revivals among the Crow and Salish peoples as well as ecosystem restoration by Pacific Northwest peoples. We see resilience among Arctic Inuit peoples struggling with climate emergencies, and Gwich’in peoples resisting oil development in caribou calving grounds.
What's included
3 videos15 readings1 assignment1 discussion prompt5 plugins
3 videos• Total 49 minutes
- Lecture - Indigenous Religions and Ecology: From Encounter to Contemporary Activism - John Grim• 15 minutes
- Melissa Nelson, "Indigenous Cosmovisions and Foodways in North America." Interview by John Grim. • 19 minutes
- Jeannette Armstrong, "Okanagan Lifeways and Indigenous Environmental Activism." Interview by John Grim• 15 minutes
15 readings• Total 99 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Hopi Messenger: Thomas Banyacya”• 1 minute
- North America: Native ecologies and cosmovisions renew treaties with the Earth and fuel Indigenous movements • 28 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Indigenous Cosmovisions and Foodways in North America”• 1 minute
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Thomas Yellowtail, Crown Sun Dance Chief”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “Okanagan Lifeways and Indigenous Environmental Activism”• 1 minute
- Indigenous Traditions and the Nurturing Power of Nature• 42 minutes
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “River of Kings, Part 1: Restoration”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “Why lakes and rivers should have the same rights as humans” • 1 minute
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Human Trauma and Climate Trauma”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “Gwichi’in Voices for the Arctic Refuge” • 1 minute
- Ontology on the ice: Inuit traditions, ecology, and the problem of categories• 21 minutes
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
1 assignment• Total 10 minutes
- Module 4: Native North Americans• 10 minutes
1 discussion prompt• Total 5 minutes
- Module 4: Native North Americans• 5 minutes
5 plugins• Total 60 minutes
- Hopi Messenger: Thomas Banyacya• 12 minutes
- Thomas Yellowtail, Crow Sun Dance Chief • 14 minutes
- Kelsey Leonard, "Why lakes and rivers should have the same rights as humans"• 13 minutes
- Sheila Watt Cloutier, “Human Trauma and Climate Trauma” • 16 minutes
- Gwichi’in Voices for the Arctic Refuge • 5 minutes
We examine Indigenous peoples from Meso-America through the Amazon Basin and South America. In diverse ways their cosmovisions draw on traditional values and practices providing resilience in the face of present challenges. As Indigenous peoples reintegrate their social and spiritual visions they mount creative modes of resistance to exploitation. These contemporary expressions of environmental activism directly relate to their struggles to establish the rights of nature as expressed in the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Mother Earth.
What's included
2 videos16 readings1 assignment1 discussion prompt9 plugins
2 videos• Total 43 minutes
- Miguel Astor-Aguilera, "Mayan Ecological Practices and Cosmovisions in Mesoamerica." Interview by John Grim• 22 minutes
- Ana Mariella Bacigalupo, “South American Shamanism and Indigenous Cosmopolitics.” Interview by John Grim• 21 minutes
16 readings• Total 37 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Mayan Elder Paula López Domingo Speaks”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “Mayan Ecological Practices and Cosmovisions in Mesoamerica” • 1 minute
- (Optional) Latin America: Indigenous Cosmovision• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Preventing Environmental & Human Abuses in Oaxaca, Mexico”• 1 minute
- Religion, Ritual, and Agriculture among the Present-Day Nahua of Mesoamerica • 19 minutes
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More • 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “The Xapiri look after everything” • 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “Brazilian Indigenous Leader Davi Kopenawa”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “The Amazon belongs to humanity -- let’s protect it together” 1min• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “South American Shamanism and Indigenous Cosmopolitics”• 1 minute
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: Trailer for “The Rights of Nature: A Global Movement”• 1 minute
- Universal Declaration of Rights of Mother Earth - The Rights of Nature• 8 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “The Rights of Nature: A Global Movement”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “Pay it Forward” • 1 minute
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
1 assignment• Total 10 minutes
- Module 5: Native Peoples in Meso-America and South America• 10 minutes
1 discussion prompt• Total 5 minutes
- Module 5: Native Peoples in Meso-America and South America• 5 minutes
9 plugins• Total 58 minutes
- Mayan Elder Paula López Domingo Speaks• 7 minutes
- Preventing Environmental & Human Rights Abuses in Oaxaca, Mexico• 6 minutes
- Working with Indigenous Peoples to Protect Forests in Panama • 6 minutes
- Davi Kopenawa, “The Xapiri look after everything”• 1 minute
- Brazilian Indigenous Leader Davi Kopenawa• 15 minutes
- Tashka and Laura Yawanawá, “The Amazon belongs to humanity -- let’s protect it together”• 6 minutes
- Trailer for "The Rights of Nature: A Global Movement"• 2 minutes
- The Rights of Nature: A Global Movement• 5 minutes
- Xiye Bastida, “Pay it Forward - Envisioning Next Steps with Our Leaders of Tomorrow.” Start at 2 minute mark • 10 minutes
We open with Wangari Maathai, the Nobel Prize winning environmentalist and founder of the Greenbelt Movement for reforestation led by women. Then we explore local Native groups in Africa touching on their environmental challenges after centuries of colonization. Forest conservation and climate challenges provide themes for exploring ways in which traditional African societies bring religious worldviews and ethics to bear on these issues.
What's included
4 videos17 readings1 assignment1 discussion prompt4 plugins
4 videos• Total 45 minutes
- Wangari Maathai, “‘As Revealed to You’: Environments that Shape Our Stories”• 5 minutes
- Wangari Maathai, “Recapturing Values for the Community of the Living”• 4 minutes
- Jacob Kehinde Olupona, “Yoruba Cosmology and Environmental Knowledge in Africa.” Interview by John Grim• 21 minutes
- Jessie N. K. Mugambi, "African Ecological Identity and Religious Environmentalism." Interview by John Grim• 15 minutes
17 readings• Total 70 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Taking Root: The Vision of Wangari Maathai”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “As Revealed to You” and “Recapturing Values for the Community of the Living”• 1 minute
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Rethinking the Study of African Indigenous Religion in the 21st Century”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “Yoruba Cosmology and Environmental Knowledge in Africa”• 1 minute
- Communicating African Spirituality through Ecology: Challenges and Prospects for the 21st Century • 21 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “African Ecological Identity and Religious Environmentalism”• 1 minute
- (Optional) Jessie N. K. Mugambi, “African Heritage and Ecological Stewardship”• 0 minutes
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
- “It’s our home”: Pygmies fight for recognition as forest protectors• 4 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “The Man Who Stopped the Desert”• 1 minute
- The traditions that could save a nation’s forests • 12 minutes
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
- African Religion, Climate Change, and Knowledge Systems• 13 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: "Indigenous knowledge meets science to take on climate change"• 1 minute
- Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, “Women's Leadership in Chad” • 13 minutes
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
1 assignment• Total 10 minutes
- Module 6: Native Peoples of Africa• 10 minutes
1 discussion prompt• Total 5 minutes
- Module 6: Native Peoples of Africa• 5 minutes
4 plugins• Total 37 minutes
- Jacob Olupona, “Rethinking the Study of African Indigenous Religion in the 21st Century”• 13 minutes
- Pygmy Peoples of the DRC: A Rising Movement• 6 minutes
- The Man Who Stopped the Desert• 5 minutes
- Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim, “Indigenous knowledge meets science to take on climate change” • 13 minutes
We examine regions in Asia where Indigenous peoples continue to experience global and national challenges to their cultural integrity. These include projects such as dams, deforestation, and industrial extraction in which environmental resistance provides rallying points for Indigenous cultural survival. We explore the practices of these Indigenous peoples as they ritually interact with land and biodiversity, which also includes the revival of diverse forms of shamanism.
What's included
4 videos19 readings1 assignment1 discussion prompt6 plugins
4 videos• Total 92 minutes
- Charisma K. Lepcha, “Lepcha Identity and Environmentalism in the Eastern Himalayas.” Interview by John Grim• 25 minutes
- Dan Smyer Yu, "Indigenous Peoples and Ecological Knowledge in the Himalayas." Interview by John Grim • 18 minutes
- Guest Lecture - Problematizing Ideas of “Purity” and “Timelessness” in the Conservation Narratives of Sacred Groves - Lily Zeng• 5 minutes
- Looking Up• 44 minutes
19 readings• Total 80 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Lepcha Identity and Environmentalism in the Eastern Himalayas”• 1 minute
- An Indigenous Cosmovisionary Turn in the Study of Religion and Ecology• 33 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Indigenous Peoples and Ecological Knowledge in the Himalayas” • 1 minute
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Indigenous peoples India”• 1 minute
- The Adivasi Struggle Against Environmental Injustice • 10 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Conservation threatens India’s Baiga tribe”• 1 minute
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Problematizing Ideas of ‘Purity’ and ‘Timelessness’ in the Conservation Narratives of Sacred Groves”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “Cambodia: Fight for Areng Valley”• 1 minute
- Indigenous World 2019: Philippines • 18 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Indigenous climate change solutions in Indonesia”• 1 minute
- (Optional) Pre-video introduction: “Tradition and landscape management in West Timor”• 0 minutes
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Looking Up”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “The Shamans of Tuva”• 1 minute
- (Optional) Pre-video introduction: “Altai Pilgrim - Standing on Sacred Ground”• 0 minutes
- Ancient Faith, Modern Market: Siberian Shamanism Takes on the 21st Century• 10 minutes
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
1 assignment• Total 10 minutes
- Module 7: Indigenous Peoples in Asia• 10 minutes
1 discussion prompt• Total 5 minutes
- Module 7: Indigenous Peoples in Asia• 5 minutes
6 plugins• Total 41 minutes
- Indigenous peoples India – standing for the right to legally own and manage the forests sustainably • 5 minutes
- Conservation threatens India’s Baiga tribe• 6 minutes
- Cambodia: Fight for Areng Valley• 11 minutes
- Indigenous climate change solutions in Indonesia• 8 minutes
- The Shamans of Tuva• 10 minutes
- (Optional) Altai Pilgrim - Standing on Sacred Ground• 1 minute
We examine diverse groups of Indigenous-Aboriginal peoples who for over 50,000 years have inhabited the land mass now called Australia. Cosmovisions, law, and cultural practices find expressions in Dreaming and Songlines, as well as social and eco-justice movements. We hear elders narrate how mythic stories ground fire regimes that keep forested areas cleared. We see how restoration projects bring traditional knowledge forward for renewal of peoples and ecosystems. Many of these ancient custodial relations are now beginning to inform mainstream societies’ ecological practices.
What's included
1 video19 readings1 assignment1 discussion prompt11 plugins
1 video• Total 21 minutes
- Kerry Arabena, "Australian Indigenous Peoples and Cosmopolitics." Interview by John Grim• 21 minutes
19 readings• Total 55 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “The myth of Aboriginal stories being myths”• 1 minute
- Pre-video Introduction: “The Land Owns Us”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “Every Living Thing is Family”• 1 minute
- Some Thoughts about the Philosophical Underpinnings of Aboriginal Worldviews• 32 minutes
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: Trailer for “Ailan Kastom” • 1 minute
- (Optional) Pre-video introduction: “Ailan Kastom (Island Custom) - Torres Strait Documentary”• 0 minutes
- Torres Strait Regional Authority• 5 minutes
- The Mayor Fighting to Save Her Island Home from Climate Change• 8 minutes
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Songlines: Aboriginal Art and Storytelling”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “Sharing a story through Aboriginal Australian Songline”• 1 minute
- (Optional) Pre-video introduction: “Gujingga Songline”• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Aboriginal Art and Music”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “Australian Indigenous Peoples and Cosmopolitics” 1min• 1 minute
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Aboriginal Water Initiative”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “Three things I know about fire management”• 1 minute
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
1 assignment• Total 10 minutes
- Module 8: First Nations in Australia• 10 minutes
1 discussion prompt• Total 5 minutes
- Module 8: First Nations in Australia• 5 minutes
11 plugins• Total 50 minutes
- Jacinta Koolmatrie, “The myth of Aboriginal stories being myths”• 11 minutes
- Bob Randall, “The Land Owns Us”• 6 minutes
- Every Living Thing is Family• 3 minutes
- Trailer for Ailan Kastom• 9 minutes
- (Optional) “Ailan Kastom (Island Custom) - Torres Strait Documentary”• 1 minute
- Colin Jones, “Songlines: Aboriginal Art and Storytelling”• 4 minutes
- Elwyn Henaway, “Sharing a story through Aboriginal Australian Songline”• 2 minutes
- (Optional) Yidumduma Bill Harney, “Gujingga Songline”• 1 minute
- Aboriginal Art and Music• 3 minutes
- Aboriginal Water Initiative• 5 minutes
- Three things I know about fire management• 5 minutes
The relations of Indigenous peoples to oceans, islands, rivers, and biodiversity are the focus of this module on the Pacific region. Interactive themes such as cosmovisions, transoceanic voyages, food sovereignty, and climate emergencies frame these discussions. Ancient Māori and Hawaiian aspirations toward ecological wellbeing surfaces in the renewal of Indigenous knowledge and cultural practices leading to responsibility for our planet. This also finds expression in the quest for rights of nature.
What's included
1 video19 readings1 assignment1 discussion prompt14 plugins
1 video• Total 29 minutes
- Krushil Watene, “Māori Knowledge and Indigenous Landscapes in New Zealand.” Interview by John Grim• 29 minutes
19 readings• Total 48 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Maori values - Manaaki”• 1 minute
- In search of harmony: Indigenous traditions of the Pacific and ecology • 17 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “The Rights of Nature: A Global Movement”• 1 minute
- New Zealand river first in the world to be given legal human status• 2 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Māori Knowledge and Indigenous Landscapes in New Zealand” 1min• 1 minute
- (Optional) Pre-video introduction: “Kaitiakitanga”• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “The Power of Water”• 1 minute
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “History of Hokulea”• 1 minute
- Pre-video introduction: “Mau Piailug”• 1 minute
- (Optional) Pre-video introduction: “Hōkūleʻa Worldwide Voyage Recap” and “Hokulea Homecoming”• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Long Story Short with Leslie Wilcox: Nainoa Thompson”• 1 minute
- The Story of Hōkūle’a• 5 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Standing on Sacred Ground - Islands of Sanctuary”• 1 minute
- Returning to the Roots of Community Resilience in Hawai’i• 14 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Like a Mighty Wave: A Maunakea Film” • 1 minute
- (Optional) “A New Hawaiian Renaissance”: how a telescope protest became a movement• 0 minutes
- Pre-video introduction: “Kū Ha’aheo E Ku’u Hawai’i”• 1 minute
- (Optional) Ways to Learn More• 0 minutes
1 assignment• Total 10 minutes
- Module 9: Indigenous Peoples of the Pacific• 10 minutes
1 discussion prompt• Total 5 minutes
- Module 9: Indigenous Peoples of the Pacific• 5 minutes
14 plugins• Total 118 minutes
- Māori values - Manaaki• 1 minute
- The Rights of Nature: A Global Movement• 18 minutes
- (Optional) Eco Maori, “Kaitiakitanga”• 1 minute
- The Power of Water; Interview with Maori leader• 6 minutes
- History of Hokulea• 10 minutes
- Mau Piailug: Remembering Hokulea’s first navigator • 5 minutes
- Hokulea: How to navigate without instruments• 4 minutes
- Hōkūleʻa Worldwide Voyage Recap• 30 minutes
- (Optional) Hokulea Homecoming• 1 minute
- Long Story Short with Leslie Wilcox: Nainoa Thompson• 18 minutes
- Standing on Sacred Ground – Islands of Sanctuary• 2 minutes
- (Optional) Kaho’olawe Documentary - "Mai Ka Piko Mai a Ho’i: Return to Kanaloa"• 1 minute
- Like a Mighty Wave: A Maunakea Film• 16 minutes
- Kū Ha’aheo E Ku’u Hawai’i• 5 minutes
What's included
1 video1 reading
1 video• Total 2 minutes
- Course Conclusion: Indigenous Religions and Ecology - John Grim and Mary Evelyn Tucker• 2 minutes
1 reading• Total 5 minutes
- Letter from John Grim and Mary Evelyn Tucker• 5 minutes
Instructors
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We asked all learners to give feedback on our instructors based on the quality of their teaching style.


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For more than 300 years, Yale University has inspired the minds that inspire the world. Based in New Haven, Connecticut, Yale brings people and ideas together for positive impact around the globe. A research university that focuses on students and encourages learning as an essential way of life, Yale is a place for connection, creativity, and innovation among cultures and across disciplines.
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Reviewed on Jan 18, 2024
Honestly one of the best courses I have ever taken!
Reviewed on Jul 5, 2022
Some of the video links did not work but I was able to google the videosI'm not sure why my grammerly spell check will not work in the reply sections
Reviewed on Nov 22, 2024
I found this course riveting and looked forward to it every day.
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