I’m several years into retirement and always looking for new
things to learn. Not for credit or working towards a degree or certificate;
just for the pleasure of new knowledge. They say learning new things keeps
dementia at bay; I just say it’s fun.
Here are some examples of free and low-cost learning
platforms for people of every age:
·
Open Yale
Courses, introductory courses taught by Yale faculty, free. Example online
classes:
o
Frontiers and Controversies in Astrophysics
o
Introduction to Ancient Greek History
o
Financial Theory
o
Philosophy and the Science of Human Nature
·
And my favorite, a course I’ve taken and learned
a lot from:
o
The Science of
Wellbeing
·
Harvard
online courses, courses taught by Harvard faculty, free. Example online
classes:
o
Introduction to Computer Science
o
New Ideas for Nonprofit Leaders
o
Contemporary China: The People’s Republic,
Taiwan and Hong Kong
o
Fundamentals of Neuroscience
·
Osher Lifelong Learning Institutes,
classes offered for seniors (50+) through local universities (often professors
as instructors), varying costs. Check here to see if your
local university hosts an Osher Institute. Example online classes:
o
Basic Watercolor Introduction (offered through University
of Utah)
o
Yoga for Movement and Flexibility (offered
through University of Utah)
·
Smithsonian Associates,
classes offered through the Smithsonian Institution (the world’s largest museum,
education and research complex), varying costs. Example online classes:
o
Achieving Balanced Compositions in Photography
($45-55)
o
Frida Kahlo: Her Art and Life ($25-30)
o
George Washington in Barbados: A Remarkable
Journey ($20-25)
o
Inside Smithsonian Libraries: the Cullman
Library ($40-50)
·
One Day
University, offering hundreds of videos of past in-person lectures by
university faculty, membership at $8.95/ month or $139/year. Example videos:
o
President Ike: The Legacy of Dwight D.
Eisenhower
o
New Class/New Images: The Remarkable James Webb
Space Telescope
o
The Amazing World of Frequency: From Bad Vibes
to Good Vibrations
o
The Universal Timekeeper: Reconstructing History
Atom by Atom
Just do a little googling on your own and you’ll be
surprised how many different learning opportunities you’ll find online. Enjoy!