#free courses

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I was recently introduced to the website and app Khan Academy. If you haven’t heard about thisI was recently introduced to the website and app Khan Academy. If you haven’t heard about thisI was recently introduced to the website and app Khan Academy. If you haven’t heard about thisI was recently introduced to the website and app Khan Academy. If you haven’t heard about this

I was recently introduced to the website and app Khan Academy. If you haven’t heard about this site, it allows you to choose from a variety of subjects to learn all for free !
The subjects vary from science, computers and art and history. I will be starting the history course “The Road the Revolution (1754-1800)”.
I am always thankful to these sorts of websites that allow you to brush up on your knowledge or gives you the opportunity to learn something new altogether.
So if you are interested in some free online learning, check out www.Khanacademy.com.


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creations-by-chaosfay:

Bluprint, formerly known as Craftsy, is offer all their online classes (1300+) free for the next two weeks.

Take advantage of this. Learn to sew, quilt, embroider, knit, and many other skills.

This is amazing! There are tons of courses here for people who want to make clothing and costumes. Over 200 on sewing alone

caimofnoceur:

17 free and helpful things, that everyone can take advantage of

  • Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library They send an age appropriate book once a month if you have a child younger than 5.
  • Project GutenbergLots of free classic books.
  • Library GenesisA great place to look for and download college/university textbooks for free, as well as other books.
  • ScihubEndless Free college books. (and peer-reviewed scientific publications that are otherwise hidden behind a paywall)
  • Khan AcademyFree knowledge that you can use to clep out of university courses, or to simply invest your time in a worthwhile topic.
  • OpenlearnUK’s Open University - free courses for all levels of study, samples of university materials, study skills and tie-ins to BBC documentaries. Everything under Creative Commons licence so you can use it as you see fit.
  • DuolingoThe Green Owl of Languages.There are a few hundred that it teaches and the mobile app makes it easy to do anywhere while waiting (!warning! only good for Spanish, German, French, Dutch, Esperanto, and English. with anything else it gets very low-quality and short.).
  • CodecademyAn awesome site to learn how to use some programming languages. Doesn’t get into the really advanced stuff, but it’s good for a start.
  • PhotopeaCompletely free Photoshop clone that has all the basic features of Photoshop, using basically the same interface.
  • GimpAnotherfree version of Photoshop.
  • UnsplashStockoffree photos of just about anything, provided by the photographers themselves, to do with what you like.
  • FuturemeYou can write letters to yourself (or other people) in the future! You can also make notifications and reminders of a +doctors appointments or anything else important.
  • Heavens AboveYou can look up all the satellites flying over your house tonight, including the ISS, Hubble Space Telescope, those pesky Starlink satellites, and whatever else your heart desires, complete with star maps and precise timing. And there is an Android app, but unfortunately no iOS one last I checked. (For iOS you can use “Sputnik!” which is free and tells, when ISS and Hubble passes overhead.)
  • Night Sky Other astronomy app for iOS. If you hold your phone to the sky the app tells you what you’re looking at (or point it at the ground for a view from the other side of the planet). Zoom in with two fingers and tons of deep space stuff is revealed.
  • Freecycleits literally people giving away stuff they don’t need/want any more that they can’t/don’t care enough to sell.
  • Nexus ModsHas thousands of video game mods (for 1,509PC games), made by independent content creators, available to download at no cost.
  • ArchiveThe Archive aka Internet Archive is a non-profit library of millions of free books, movies, software, music, websites, and so much more… For example a lot of DOS games (classics like Prince of Persia, Oregon Trail, DOOM, Monkey island, Rayman, Turtles), directly playable through the browser.

My earlier list

Morethings to do

the-smell-of-petrichor: ms-demeanor:ablackmanshaki:mistybox051: !! Fr? Lemme check this outHer

the-smell-of-petrichor:

ms-demeanor:

ablackmanshaki:

mistybox051:

!!

Fr? Lemme check this out

Here’s the link to all of the free online classes offered by Harvard:

https://www.edx.org/school/harvardx

But TBH I prefer the MIT Open Coursewear approach. Feel like taking a class on the policy and economics of nuclear engineering? MIT’s got you covered:


https://ocw.mit.edu/courses/find-by-topic/#cat=engineering&subcat=nuclearengineering&spec=nuclearsystemspolicyandeconomics

In fact they’ve got  you covered with A LOT of their courses, everything from fine arts to immunology.

Have fun :)

WHERE HAS THIS BEEN THE LAST TWO YEARS


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