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- Coursera
- Offers a huge variety of university-level courses in humanities, science, business, and more. educationbadge.com+2Bestcolleges.com+2
- Many courses can be audited for free (you can see all the materials), though certificates and graded assignments may cost extra. educationbadge.com+1
- Great for students who want high-quality academic content from top schools.
- edX
- Khan Academy
- Completely free, non-profit platform. Savings Grove
- Excellent for school / K-12 level learning: math, science, history, test preparation, etc. Edu Info Portal+1
- Interactive practice exercises + videos + personalized learning dashboards. Edu Info Portal
- MIT OpenCourseWare (OCW)
- Provides free access to course materials from thousands of MIT courses. MIT OpenCourseWare+1
- Includes lecture notes, assignments, exams, and even video lectures for many courses. MIT Open Learning
- No registration is needed; content is self-paced and open for lifelong learning. MIT OpenCourseWare
- OpenLearn by The Open University
- Offers many free courses in different subjects: science, health, arts, languages, and more. Savings Grove
- You can earn a “Statement of Participation” for some courses. Savings Grove
- Flexible learning, no strict deadlines for most courses.
- Alison
- Thousands of free courses in business, technology, health, personal development, etc. Savings Grove+1
- Courses are free, but certificates / diplomas cost a small fee. Medium+1
- Very practical for students wanting job-relevant skills.
- IBM SkillsBuild
- Free global education platform by IBM. Wikipedia
- Offers project-based training and digital credentials. Wikipedia
- Covers technology skills like cybersecurity, AI, data analytics, and also soft skills.
- FutureLearn
- Offers many free short courses from top universities and institutions. https://www.educations.com
- Free access option gives you course material during the course + 14 days after. FutureLearn
- Designed for flexible learning; good mix of academic and applied topics.
- freeCodeCamp
- A very popular and completely free platform for coding. Wikipedia
- Curriculum includes web development, JavaScript, data structures, APIs, and more. Wikipedia
- Students build real projects and can earn certificates for each “module.” GitHub
- Academic Earth
- Free video courses / lectures from top universities (Harvard, MIT, Stanford, etc.). Wikipedia
- Covers a broad range of subjects: science, humanities, business, social sciences. Wikipedia
- Great for self-learners who prefer video lectures in a structured academic format.
✅ How to Choose the Right Platform for You
- Know your goal: If you want to learn coding, use freeCodeCamp; for academic courses, try Coursera, edX, or MIT OCW.
- Time commitment: For short courses, platforms like FutureLearn are ideal; for long-term / deep learning, MIT OCW or edX work better.
- Certification: If you don’t need a certificate, audit options or free platforms are perfect. But if you need proof of learning, check whether certification is free or paid.
- Learning style:
- Videos + exercises → Khan Academy, freeCodeCamp
- Lecture notes + problem sets → MIT OCW
- Project-based / real-world skills → IBM SkillsBuild, Alison