Filter by
SubjectRequired
LanguageRequired
The language used throughout the course, in both instruction and assessments.
Learning ProductRequired
LevelRequired
DurationRequired
SkillsRequired
SubtitlesRequired
EducatorRequired
Results for "complex problem solving"
- Status: Free Trial
University of Virginia
Skills you'll gain: Agile Product Development, User Story, Design Thinking, Product Improvement, Agile Methodology, Agile Software Development, Product Design, Product Development, User Centered Design, User Research, Persona Development, Innovation, Product Management, Discussion Facilitation, Software Development, Testability
- Status: Free Trial
Skills you'll gain: Responsible AI, Risk Analysis, Risk Management, Generative AI, Root Cause Analysis, Data-Driven Decision-Making, Analysis, Strategic Decision-Making, Scenario Testing, Strategic Thinking, Data Analysis, Data Ethics, Strategic Planning, Artificial Intelligence
- Status: Free Trial
Skills you'll gain: Technical Design, User Feedback, Technical Consulting, Solution Design, Solution Architecture, SAP Applications, Technical Communication, Requirements Analysis, Business Analysis, Business Requirements, Requirements Elicitation, Gap Analysis, Customer Engagement, Communication
- Status: Free Trial
University of Glasgow
Skills you'll gain: Application Deployment, Application Development, Code Review, Software Development, Prototyping, Web Applications, JavaScript Frameworks, Software Engineering, Javascript, Computational Thinking, Version Control, Programming Principles, Program Management
- Status: Preview
Stanford University
Skills you'll gain: Mathematical Theory & Analysis, Mathematics and Mathematical Modeling, Calculus, Deductive Reasoning, Logical Reasoning
In summary, here are 5 of our most popular complex problem solving courses
- Agile Meets Design Thinking:Â University of Virginia
- Scenario and Root Cause Analysis with Generative AI:Â Microsoft
- Designing an SAP Solution:Â SAP
- Computational Thinking with JavaScript 4: Create & Deploy:Â University of Glasgow
- Introduction to Mathematical Thinking:Â Stanford University