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    What's this?
7 places where you can get a free online education
Whether you're looking to brush up on your calculus or test your brainpower against Ivy League students, you can do it for free online.

By

Shea Gunther
Thu, Feb 23 2012 at 8:43 AM
 26

Related Topics:

MNN lists, Education, Web, Schools
man sitting on couch with laptop

ONLINE EDUCATION: Although tuition has been increasing, a plethora of free online options has become available. (Photo: Ina Peters/iStockphoto)

Anyone who has paid tuition or sent in checks to repay a student loan knows that education is not cheap. The cost of a college education can easily reach six figures, with some graduates leaving school with a diploma and more than $200,000 in debt.
 
The costs associated with higher education are climbing even faster than inflation. When you factor in the added costs of books, meal plans and housing, it's enough to make even the most frugal savers cringe.
 
Luckily, while tuition has been rising, a plethora of free online options has become available. Some websites like the Khan Academy exist to help students round out their understanding of subjects like trigonometry and calculus while top-notch universities have begun to put courses online for free. We can't all get accepted to Harvard, but we can click over and watch every lecture from an Introduction to Computer Science course and do all the assignments and tests like real Harvard students do.
 
There has never been a better time to flex your brain with free online courses, so we scoured the Web high and low and found some of the best options for increasing your brainpower from the comfort of your computer without paying a dime in tuition. Here are some of the best options to be found. Enjoy!
 
Khan Academy
Khan Academy was started when founder Salman Khan started making videos to help his cousins with math homework. As he made more videos, he began to attract an audience outside his immediate friends and family. He has since branched out into science, history and economics and he quit his day job as a hedge fund analyst in 2006. He’s created more than 2,600 videos and attracted fans and financial backers like Bill Gates and Google's philanthropic arm.
 
If you are looking to round out your knowledge of math, science, history or economics, a visit to Khan Academy is good place to start. The website has a great feature that will track your progress and test your comprehension in any given focus, giving you points for your work, just like a video game.
 
MIT
MIT is consistently ranked as one of the top universities in the world and has produced scores of Nobel Prize winners and Rhodes Scholars, astronauts, famed architects and successful entrepreneurs. The coursework is well known for being fast-paced and challenging, and the institution prepares its graduates to face a hungry sea of tech companies clamoring for their employment post-graduation.
 
MIT is highly selective and tuition and expenses will set you back around $50,000 per year. If you don't have the grades, availability or cash to shell out for a proper MIT education, you can click over to the MIT OpenCourseWare site and dive right into whatever class you'd like. The school has put nearly all of its courses online and also makes homework and tests available for virtual students. The school spends millions of dollars every year on the effort and can be credited with spurring other colleges like Harvard and Stanford into doing the same with their coursework.
 
University of Reddit
The University of Reddit is an offshoot of the popular link-sharing website Reddit and was founded by people dedicated to the idea of setting information and education free. Classes are taken and taught by anyone and cover a variety of topics, including drawing, introduction to filmmaking, beginning computer programming with java, puppy training, how to speak Korean and Arabic, and how to play the (notoriously difficult) video game Dwarf Fortress. Since the University of Reddit is open to anyone who wants to teach a course, quality can be spotty, but it's easy to view each lesson to find the best material. The class formats make it easy to learn at your own pace.
 
Stanford
Stanford University, one of the top technology schools in the world, was founded in 1891 as a West Coast answer to Harvard. The university has deep ties in the world of technology and was an early booster of Silicon Valley. It counts as its alumni founders of companies like Google, Yahoo!, Sun Microsystems and Hewlett-Packard. Stanford has been making many of its courses available online since 2006 and has a large presence on iTunes where you can download free lectures in subjects like business, engineering, history, math, science and education.
 
Harvard
Harvard University is perhaps the best-known top-tier school in the world and was established in 1636, making it the oldest university in the United States. It's also the richest school in the world with an endowment in the tens of billions of dollars. This wealth allows Harvard students with parents making less than $60,000 a year to pay no in tuition, and those making up to $80,000 a year pay just a few thousand dollars. That money has also allowed the university to make its online courses free to the world. Visitors to the Harvard Extension School can take eight online courses in their entirety.
 
Berkeley
The University of California, Berkeley is another top school that has invested in putting its coursework online for free. The university was founded in 1866 and is one of the top-ranked schools in the world with a widely respected standing in research and technology. The institution has been affiliated with the Los Alamos National Laboratory, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and its alumni have been credited with discovering 16 elements on the Periodic Table of Elements. Berkeley's online offerings cover many of the school’s courses and are recorded as videos on YouTube.
 
Yale
Yale University is the third-oldest university in the United States and was founded in 1701. Yale is another extremely rich school with a total endowment of nearly $20 billion. Yale has churned out five U.S. presidents, 19 U.S. Supreme Court justices and countless business, political and academic leaders. And now, thanks to the school’s Open Yale Courses, many of the school’s introductory level classes are available to anyone with a Web browser. Courses are available in departments like English, astronomy, music, political science, environmental studies and more, andthey are available via video, audio or transcript.
 
Photos: Khan Academy, University of Reddit, AntyDiluvian/flickr
 
Also on MNN:
  • MIT and Harvard team up to offer free online ed
  • Education pays off in better jobs, higher salaries
  • Study links lower education to faster aging

You might also like:

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Comments: 26
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grooovym74's picture
grooovym74 Jun 29 2012 at 7:45 AM

thanks for this, printing and using this list.

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anonymous
gorodok-ua.ucoz.ru May 18 2012 at 12:54 PM

http://gorodok-ua.ucoz.ru

Thanks for these CV templates. They should be very useful for us.

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anonymous
Guest May 15 2012 at 1:42 PM

coursera.org

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starbuck
Starbuck May 14 2012 at 1:26 PM

Although I was familiar with a few of these, I appreciate finding new resources. I really like the fact that there are places to learn online. I know people who use Khan Academy for homeschooling their own children which makes it a very valuable, even indispensable resource. There are all kinds of reasons one might want to take advantage of free, online education and I think it's great that so much is being offered.

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orchidgal2008
orchidgal2008 May 14 2012 at 7:46 AM
It was a Stanford professor who conceived and began offering the same course online that he taught at Stanford and within a few months had 160,000 students from around the world for his computer science course. Eventually, other universities like MIT began doing the same. It is the same course material one can progress in at their own pace and upon completion, at least Stanford offers confirmation the individual has completed the course successfully. He eventually quit his tenured post and Stanford
.... More
and is devoting his time to offering courses online for free. He and other professors are networking with employers to recommend students for jobs. He discovered the majority of his Stanford students were no longer attending class but taking his material online and just showing up for exams. In this rapidly changing world it is an excellent way for one to keep up with changes one needs for the workforce. It's not the degree but what you know and can do with employers. If one googles "free online (courses)" + the University name, one can get the link to find the courses offered.
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anonymous
Jim May 13 2012 at 10:11 PM

What a stupid story. There are no degrees for free. These schools offer classes for free, not degrees, and any decent school has free classes.

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anonymous
Guest Jun 09 2012 at 11:32 AM

Free Education!

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anonymous
Guest May 14 2012 at 12:13 PM

It doesn't say you can get a degree silly, you must first read with understanding! It simply says free education. Have an AWESOME day!

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anonymous
monet61 May 12 2012 at 11:23 AM

Thank you for this information. I'm one of the older people that really wants to continue my learning and this seems to be a great,(and cheap) way to do so.

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bothkins
bothkins May 11 2012 at 5:03 PM

sounds intersting..knowledge is power. Someone once said

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anonymous
Older American May 11 2012 at 1:04 PM

Free online courses is a great idea. What better way for older people that wanted to go back to school to get back into the swing of things before laying down the tuition. It's also a great way to get more knowlegde on a subject of interest that is outside of your profession. I was raised that every day you learn something new is a great day.

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anonymous
Brandon May 05 2012 at 10:44 PM

Do any of these count as accredited classes toward a degree?

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anonymous
Guest May 08 2012 at 1:18 PM

nowhere does it say that you get credit for this free "education:. so, without credit, why would anyone waste their time taking these classes?

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anonymous
Stacy May 14 2012 at 7:55 AM

To learn, anonymous...to learn.

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anonymous
Guest May 13 2012 at 2:59 PM

Improving yourself in any way is hardly "a waste of time". Besides, many of these courses can be used toward professional development goals that many employers require for employees.

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anonymous
Guest May 13 2012 at 1:12 AM

If you think it's a waste of your time, then the value of taking a class at one of these universities is lost on you.

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anonymous
Mike May 12 2012 at 9:24 PM

Duh, to learn. wow

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anonymous
Guest May 12 2012 at 5:49 PM

For the heck of LEARNING something!!!!

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anonymous
Guest May 11 2012 at 7:25 PM

you learn because you love knowledge. It's for you! YOUR mind!

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anonymous
Guest May 11 2012 at 12:02 PM

TO learn something - Not everything in this world needs to be expressed as a commodity.

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anonymous
Guest May 11 2012 at 9:44 AM

Unfortunately, Anonymous is not alone in his or her opinion. I teach at a university and I see plenty of students who don't care if they learn anything in class, just as long as they get the credit to graduate.

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anonymous
Guest May 09 2012 at 11:19 AM

Some people enjoy learning. :l

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anonymous
Guest May 08 2012 at 6:28 PM

For the pure pleasure of learning. :) Also, if you're already a student taking a course for credit at another college, these lectures can help you along.

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anonymous
Sir. Class Feb 29 2012 at 4:58 PM

Theres www.Udacity.com too

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anonymous
Randomling Mar 03 2012 at 4:03 PM

There is indeed! I'm currently taking their CS101 and getting lots out of it. Highly recommended.

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