Filter by
The language used throughout the course, in both instruction and assessments.
Results for "material+design"
University of California San Diego
Skills you'll gain: Probability & Statistics, Experiment, Statistical Tests, Human Computer Interaction, User Experience, R Programming, Statistical Programming, User Experience Design, Data Analysis, General Statistics, Statistical Analysis, User Research, Visual Design, Probability Distribution, Regression, Collaboration, Human Learning
Skills you'll gain: User Experience, Visual Design
Arizona State University
University of Michigan
Skills you'll gain: Computer Programming, Programming Principles, Python Programming, Computer Programming Tools, Data Structures, Computational Logic, Computational Thinking, Algorithms, Design and Product, Visual Design
- Status: Free
Georgia Institute of Technology
Adobe
Skills you'll gain: Graphic Design, Visual Design
University of Michigan
Skills you'll gain: Front-End Web Development, HTML and CSS, Interactive Design, User Experience Design, Web Design, Web Development, Web Development Tools, Media Strategy & Planning, Semantic Web, Strategy and Operations, Javascript
University of Pennsylvania
Skills you'll gain: Product Design
Skills you'll gain: Product Design, User Experience, User Research
- Status: Free
Georgia Institute of Technology
Skills you'll gain: Strategy, User Experience
- Status: Free
Georgia Institute of Technology
In summary, here are 10 of our most popular material+design courses
- Interaction Design:Â University of California San Diego
- Create High-Fidelity Designs and Prototypes in Figma:Â Google
- Materials Science for Technological Application:Â Arizona State University
- Design Computing: 3D Modeling in Rhinoceros with Python/Rhinoscript:Â University of Michigan
- Material Behavior:Â Georgia Institute of Technology
- Design Fundamentals:Â Adobe
- Advanced Styling with Responsive Design:Â University of Michigan
- Design: Creation of Artifacts in Society:Â University of Pennsylvania
- Build Wireframes and Low-Fidelity Prototypes:Â Google
- Mechanics of Materials IV: Deflections, Buckling, Combined Loading & Failure Theories:Â Georgia Institute of Technology