Mindware: Critical Thinking for the Information Age
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Mindware: Critical Thinking for the Information Age
This course is part of Critical Thinking and Decision Science Specialization
Instructor: Richard E. Nisbett
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1,450 reviews
1,450 reviews
What you'll learn
Apply decision-making methods from this course to your own life.
Identify key terms that relate to causes of cognitive bias.
Better assess probability based on contextual factors.
Skills you'll gain
- Data Literacy
- Analysis
- Behavioral Economics
- Statistical Inference
- Data Analysis
- Bayesian Statistics
- Experimentation
- Decision Making
- Critical Thinking
- Research Design
- Analytical Skills
- Logical Reasoning
- Cognitive flexibility
- Statistical Methods
- Forecasting
- Deductive Reasoning
- Regression Analysis
- Adaptability
- Science and Research
- Critical Thinking and Problem Solving
Details to know
15 assignments
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There are 10 modules in this course
Most professions these days require more than general intelligence. They require in addition the ability to collect, analyze and think about data. Personal life is enriched when these same skills are applied to problems in everyday life involving judgment and choice. This course presents basic concepts from statistics, probability, scientific methodology, cognitive psychology and cost-benefit theory and shows how they can be applied to everything from picking one product over another to critiquing media accounts of scientific research. Concepts are defined briefly and breezily and then applied to many examples drawn from business, the media and everyday life.
What kinds of things will you learn? Why itβs usually a mistake to interview people for a job. Why itβs highly unlikely that, if your first meal in a new restaurant is excellent, you will find the next meal to be as good. Why economists regularly walk out of movies and leave restaurant food uneaten. Why getting your picture on the cover of Sports Illustrated usually means your next season is going to be a disappointment. Why you might not have a disease even though youβve tested positive for it. Why youβre never going to know how coffee affects you unless you conduct an experiment in which you flip a coin to determine whether you will have coffee on a given day. Why it might be a mistake to use an office in a building you own as opposed to having your office in someone elseβs building. Why you should never keep a stock thatβs going down in hopes that it will go back up and prevent you from losing any of your initial investment. Why it is that a great deal of health information presented in the media is misinformation.
Individuals and cultures can make themselves smarter. Since the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, people have become enormously smarter. The Information Age requires a brand-new set of skills involving statistics, probability, cost-benefit analysis, principles of cognitive psychology, logic and dialectical reasoning.
What's included
1 video3 readings
1 videoβ’Total 15 minutes
- Course Introductionβ’15 minutes
3 readingsβ’Total 15 minutes
- Welcome Message and Course Syllabusβ’5 minutes
- (Optional) Companion Readings from the Mindware bookβ’0 minutes
- Help us learn more about you!β’10 minutes
Basic concepts of statistics and probability including the concepts of variable, normal distribution, standard deviation, correlation, reliability, validity, and effect size. Concrete examples are drawn from everyday life and show how the concepts can be used to solve ordinary problems.
What's included
2 videos2 readings1 assignment1 discussion prompt
2 videosβ’Total 29 minutes
- Variables - Normal Distributionβ’13 minutes
- Introduction to Correlationβ’16 minutes
2 readingsβ’Total 10 minutes
- Interactive Activityβ’10 minutes
- (Optional) Companion Readings from the Mindware bookβ’0 minutes
1 assignmentβ’Total 30 minutes
- Lesson 1 Quiz β’30 minutes
1 discussion promptβ’Total 10 minutes
- End-of-Lesson Reflectionβ’10 minutes
How to think about events in such a way that they can be counted and a decision can be made about how much data is enough. You will learn about the concept of error variance and how it can be combatted by obtaining multiple observations. Your will learn that your judgments about peopleβs personalities are prone to serious errors that are largely avoided for judgments about abilities. And you will discover why itβs usually a mistake to interview job applicants.
What's included
2 videos2 readings4 assignments1 discussion prompt
2 videosβ’Total 27 minutes
- The Law of Large Numbers: Part 1β’11 minutes
- The Law of Large Numbers: Part 2β’16 minutes
2 readingsβ’Total 10 minutes
- Interactive Activityβ’10 minutes
- (Optional) Companion Readings from the Mindware bookβ’0 minutes
4 assignmentsβ’Total 45 minutes
- Lesson 2 Quizβ’30 minutes
- Pre-lecture Reflection Promptβ’5 minutes
- Pre-lecture Quizβ’5 minutes
- Post-lecture Reflection Promptβ’5 minutes
1 discussion promptβ’Total 10 minutes
- End-of-Lesson Reflectionβ’10 minutes
It can be extremely difficult to make an accurate assessment of how two variables are related to one another; prior beliefs can be more important than data in estimating the strength of a given relationship. You will learn simple tools to estimate degree of association. You will learn about the nature of illusory correlations and how to avoid them. You will learn about the concepts of confounded variable and self-selection error.
What's included
4 videos3 readings2 assignments
4 videosβ’Total 25 minutes
- Correlationsβ’4 minutes
- The Draw-a-Person Testβ’5 minutes
- Illusory Correlationβ’6 minutes
- Confounded Variables; Statistical Significanceβ’10 minutes
3 readingsβ’Total 20 minutes
- Pre-lecture Activityβ’10 minutes
- Interactive Activityβ’10 minutes
- (Optional) Companion Readings from the Mindware bookβ’0 minutes
2 assignmentsβ’Total 60 minutes
- Lesson 3 Quiz β’30 minutes
- Correlation Exercisesβ’30 minutes
You will learn that correlations can only rarely provide conclusive evidence about whether one variable exerts a causal influence on another and why experiments provide far better evidence about causality than correlations. You will be shown how to conduct experiments in business settings and experiments on yourself. You will learn the distinction between within subject designs and between subject designs. You will learn about the concept of artifacts and some tricks for avoiding them. You will learn how to discover natural experiments.
What's included
3 videos2 readings1 assignment2 discussion prompts
3 videosβ’Total 42 minutes
- The Superiority of Experiments over Correlationsβ’16 minutes
- A/B Testingβ’9 minutes
- Experimental Design and Natural Experimentsβ’17 minutes
2 readingsβ’Total 5 minutes
- Pre-lecture Activityβ’5 minutes
- (Optional) Companion Readings from the Mindware bookβ’0 minutes
1 assignmentβ’Total 30 minutes
- Lesson 4 Quizβ’30 minutes
2 discussion promptsβ’Total 40 minutes
- End-of-Lesson Reflectionβ’10 minutes
- End-of-Lesson Challengeβ’30 minutes
You will learn about the kinds of systematic errors we make when trying to predict the future. You will learn about regression to the mean and why you should assume that extreme values on a variable will be less extreme when next observed. You will learn how to think about observations in terms of true score plus error. You will learn about the concept of base rate and why it must be taken into account when estimating probabilities of specific events.
What's included
2 videos2 readings1 assignment1 discussion prompt
2 videosβ’Total 40 minutes
- Regression to the Meanβ’17 minutes
- Base Rateβ’23 minutes
2 readingsβ’Total 5 minutes
- Pre-lecture Questionβ’5 minutes
- (Optional) Companion Readings from the Mindware bookβ’0 minutes
1 assignmentβ’Total 30 minutes
- Lesson 5 Quizβ’30 minutes
1 discussion promptβ’Total 10 minutes
- End-of-Lesson Reflectionβ’10 minutes
We understand the world not through direct perception but through inferential procedures that we are unaware of. Our understanding of the world is heavily influenced by schemas or abstract representations of events. We are prone to serious judgment errors that can be avoided to a degree when we understand their basis. We make guesses about probability and causality by applying the representativeness heuristic based on similarity assessments which can be very misleading. We make judgments about frequency and probability by relying in part on the availability heuristic, judging things as frequent or probable to the degree that instances come readily to mind.
What's included
3 videos1 reading2 assignments1 discussion prompt
3 videosβ’Total 36 minutes
- The Illusion of Objectivityβ’13 minutes
- Heuristicsβ’11 minutes
- Fundamental Attribution Error; Confirmation Biasβ’11 minutes
1 reading
- (Optional) Companion Readings from the Mindware bookβ’0 minutes
2 assignmentsβ’Total 35 minutes
- Lesson 6 Quizβ’30 minutes
- Pre-lecture Quizβ’5 minutes
1 discussion promptβ’Total 10 minutes
- End-of-Lesson Reflectionβ’10 minutes
How to conduct a cost-benefit analysis. Why you should throw the analysis away after doing it if the decision is personal and very important. How to avoid throwing good money after bad. How to avoid doing something that will prevent you from doing something more valuable. Why it can be expensive to try to avoid the possibility of loss. Why incentives can backfire.
What's included
3 videos1 reading2 assignments1 discussion prompt
3 videosβ’Total 38 minutes
- Cost-Benefit Analysisβ’14 minutes
- Sunk Costsβ’11 minutes
- Loss Aversionβ’13 minutes
1 reading
- (Optional) Companion Readings from the Mindware bookβ’0 minutes
2 assignmentsβ’Total 35 minutes
- Lesson 7 Quiz β’30 minutes
- Pre-lecture Activityβ’5 minutes
1 discussion promptβ’Total 10 minutes
- End-of-Lecture Reflectionβ’10 minutes
The distinction between inductive logic and deductive logic. Syllogisms. Conditional reasoning. The distinction between truth of an argument and validity of an argument. The concepts of necessity and sufficiency. Venn diagrams. Common logical errors. When to avoid contradiction and when to embrace it, how to avoid undue certainty about judgments and decisions, and why attention to context rather than form is crucial for analysis of most real-world problems.
What's included
2 videos1 reading2 assignments1 discussion prompt
2 videosβ’Total 36 minutes
- Logical Reasoningβ’19 minutes
- Dialectical Reasoningβ’17 minutes
1 reading
- (Optional) Companion Readings from the Mindware bookβ’0 minutes
2 assignmentsβ’Total 60 minutes
- Lesson 8 Quizβ’30 minutes
- Pre-lecture Quizβ’30 minutes
1 discussion promptβ’Total 10 minutes
- End-of-Lecture Reflectionβ’10 minutes
What's included
1 video3 readings
1 videoβ’Total 6 minutes
- Concluding Thoughtsβ’6 minutes
3 readingsβ’Total 20 minutes
- (Optional) Companion Readings from the Mindware bookβ’0 minutes
- Post-course Surveyβ’10 minutes
- Keep Learning with Michigan Online!β’10 minutes
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Reviewed on Apr 7, 2020
Anyone beginner can take this course and be 100 times more understanding of information via any media while also perhaps understanding what is the best choice in some give scenario IRL.
Reviewed on Jul 20, 2017
I really love the course, and I have recommended it to all my friends. The course helped me to think more clearly and avoid cognitive biases.
Reviewed on May 13, 2018
The activities and lectures were really interesting. This is the first course that i started and completed on Coursera. So I'm super excited.
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When you enroll in the course, you get access to all of the courses in the Specialization, and you earn a certificate when you complete the work. Your electronic Certificate will be added to your Accomplishments page - from there, you can print your Certificate or add it to your LinkedIn profile.
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