Microsoft Launches Free Machine Learning Course For Beginners – Analytics India Magazine

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Microsoft has launched a free MIT-approved learning course titled “Machine Learning For Beginners” to teach students the basics of machine learning. The course duration is 12 weeks.
Azure Cloud advocates and Microsoft student ambassador authors, contributors and reviewers put together the lesson plan that uses pre and post lesson quizzes, videos, knowledge checks, infographics, sketch notes and assignments to equip the students with machine learning skills. The curriculum aims to teach classic machine learning using Scikit-learn as a resource library. 
The introduction to ML breaks down the key concepts of machine learning, history, introduction to tools and techniques and also the concept of fairness and data bias in ML. The curriculum covers Reinforcement Learning, Natural Language Processing, Time Series Forecasting, Clustering, Regression and Classification with hands-on practical lessons to teach how to use the models inside web applications. 
The curriculum covers:
Find the full curriculum here: https://github.com/microsoft/ML-For-Beginners
Last year Microsoft launched an initiative to help 25 million people worldwide to acquire digital skills in the pandemic economy. Software development, graphic designing, data analysis, financial analysis and IT administration were among the 10 jobs identified with the greatest number of job openings and steady growth in the past four years. The initiative underlines the importance of digital skills to navigate the post pandemic world.
Microsoft has also listed a few courses on the edX platform. The courses are taught by Microsoft experts and offer hands-on experience with broad reach, cutting-edge technologies in areas including cloud services, mobile development, and data sciences. The courses, ideal for students and working professionals,  teaches how to build innovative applications, services, and experiences on the Microsoft platform.

Education must adapt to the fourth industrial revolution. The World Economic Forum posits that 54% of employees will require significant reskilling by 2022. Udemy’s Global Skills Gap Report finds narrowing the skill gap is imperative to staying employed. 

For platforms, it is easier to update and scale up learning models to make data science accessible and cost-effective.
Companies like Microsoft want to help fill the demand for digitally skilled workforces. As a part of Microsoft’s global initiative launched in 2020, the company aims to do the following:
Students, to use this curriculum, fork the entire repo to your own GitHub account and complete the exercises on your own or with a group:
For further study, following the Microsoft Learn modules and learning paths.
I am a literature, media and psychology grad which explains much of my confusion in life. I like writing, especially about music. You’ll find me clicking photographs and playing music on my guitar most of the time!
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