Web-Based Educational Resources

Explore top LinkedIn content from expert professionals.

Summary

Web-based educational resources are online platforms, apps, and websites that offer learning materials for a wide range of subjects and age groups, all accessible through the internet. These digital resources can include everything from interactive games for children to university-level courses and open access research, making education more accessible and flexible than ever before.

  • Explore free platforms: Search for trusted websites and apps that provide lessons, activities, and study materials without hidden fees or subscription traps.
  • Use open-access tools: Take advantage of repositories and digital libraries that offer research papers, textbooks, and tutorials in various fields at no cost.
  • Search by subject: Narrow down your options by seeking resources focused on your learning goals, whether you need help with coding, language learning, or preparing for academic research.
Summarized by AI based on LinkedIn member posts
  • View profile for Rania Ahmed Elalfy

    ESL teacher & translator & TEFL Certified & Executive coordinator & Parliamentary Office Manager

    3,282 followers

    As I was preparing the curriculum for my upcoming English course for kids, I spent a lot of time researching free, high-quality resources and materials to make the lessons engaging, fun, and effective. I'm excited to share some of the valuable tools I discovered during this process — they’ve helped me shape a more interactive and student-centered learning experience. 💻 Websites: ✨ Starfall – Interactive reading and phonics activities 🔡 PhonicsPlay – Great for practicing phonics (some free content) 🎶 Kiboomu Kids Songs – Educational songs for young learners 📚 Twinkl – Tons of printable resources (free account needed) 📖 ReadWorks – Reading comprehension materials 🦉 Oxford Owl – Free eBooks and phonics resources 📱 Apps: 🔠 Endless Alphabet – Fun vocabulary-building app with animations 🐵 Khan Academy Kids – All-in-one learning app (free!) 👾 Teach Your Monsters to Read – Phonics-based game (💻 free on desktop) 📺 YouTube Channels: 🔤 Alphablocks – Phonics + letter sounds = fun learning 🎵 The Singing Walrus – Catchy songs that teach language basics 🕺 Jack Hartmann Kids Music Channel – Energetic songs for phonics, numbers & more If you know of any other great tools or websites you’ve used and would recommend, I’d love to hear your suggestions in the comments!

  • View profile for Darren Elias

    Strategic People Leader | Driving Culture, Capability & Business Growth

    27,898 followers

    There are many legitimate websites offering free learning resources across various subjects. Here are some of the best: General Learning & University-Level Courses 🔎 Khan Academy – Free courses on math, science, economics, and more. 🔎Coursera – Free courses from top universities (some may require payment for certificates). 🔎edX – University-level courses from institutions like Harvard and MIT. 🔎MIT OpenCourseWare – Free course materials from MIT. 🔎OpenLearn – Free courses from The Open University. Coding & Computer Science 🖥️ freeCodeCamp – Coding, web development, and data science. 🖥️CS50 by Harvard – A highly regarded introductory CS course. 🖥️W3Schools – Web development, HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and more. 🖥️The Odin Project – Full-stack web development curriculum. 🖥️MDN Web Docs – Web development documentation from Mozilla. Business & Professional Development ✒️ Harvard Online Learning – Free business, leadership, and science courses. ✒️Alison – Free online certificates in business, IT, and more. ✒️HubSpot Academy – Free marketing and sales courses. Languages & Writing 📚 Duolingo – Free language learning app. 📚BBC Languages – Free language learning resources. 📚Project Gutenberg – Free classic books for reading and learning. Science & Mathematics 🌐 Paul's Online Math Notes – College-level math tutorials. 🌐Wolfram Alpha – Math and science problem-solving tool. 🌐Physics Classroom – Free physics tutorials. Creative & Skills-Based Learning 🔰 YouTube – Many free tutorials on various topics (channels like CrashCourse, TED-Ed, etc.). 🔰 Canva Design School – Free courses on graphic design. 🔰Pixar in a Box (Khan Academy) – Free animation and storytelling lessons. Most free learning websites provide genuine access to courses, but some may charge for certificates, limit free content, or upsell premium features. To avoid hidden fees, stick to platforms like Khan Academy, MIT OpenCourseWare, and freeCodeCamp, which offer fully free resources with no risks. Always check for subscription traps, trial periods, and data collection policies before signing up.

  • View profile for Rehan Sattar

    Senior Software Engineer @Metal (YC) | Top 1% Mentor @Topmate | Author | Tech Speaker

    27,538 followers

    You don’t need to SPEND hundreds of dollars to become a great developer 💸 When I was starting out, I thought I needed paid courses, bootcamps, and premium tools to “make it.” 💡 The internet is full of GOLD if you know where to look. Here are 11 FREE resources that helped me grow, and they’re still some of the BEST out there: 1️⃣ freeCodeCamphttps://lnkd.in/dx7yHpDT Learn HTML, CSS, JavaScript, Python, APIs, data structures, and even backend projects. Full certifications totally free. 2️⃣ The Odin Projecthttps://lnkd.in/d-ppmfhH A complete full-stack curriculum. Teaches you how to build real projects the right way from the ground up. 3️⃣ CS50Harvard University’s Intro to Computer Science – https://cs50.harvard.edu The best “intro to CS” course in the world. Concepts + coding. Challenging and absolutely worth it. 4️⃣ JavaScript.info – https://javascript.info If you want to really master JavaScript, this is your go-to. Clear explanations, practical examples. 5️⃣ Frontend Masters Bootcamp (free tier) – https://lnkd.in/d8a6KAQ9 Top-tier frontend training for free. Covers HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and frameworks. 6️⃣ MIT Professional Education OpenCourseWare – Intro to Algorithms – https://ocw.mit.edu If you’re preparing for interviews or want to level up your DSA knowledge, this is gold. 7️⃣ Full Stack Open by the University of Helsinkihttps://fullstackopen.com One of the most comprehensive and modern full-stack courses out there. React, Node.js, GraphQL you name it. 8️⃣ MDN Web Docs – https://lnkd.in/dKSWh-6K The perfect guide for web developers. HTML, CSS, JS everything documented, updated, and trusted. 9️⃣ Tech Interview Handbook – https://lnkd.in/dcK2Nabz Want to crack interviews? This site breaks it down: coding, system design, resume tips, behavioral prep. 🔟 System Design Primer (GitHub) – https://lnkd.in/dtVE3FmE Legendary GitHub repo. Learn how to design scalable systems—critical for mid/senior roles. 1️⃣1️⃣ Codewell (Frontend projects) – https://www.codewell.cc Practice by building real projects. Great for building your portfolio if you’re early in your career. You don’t need a credit card. You need consistency, curiosity, and the courage to keep going. Which one of these have you tried? 👇 Or do you have your own go-to free resource? ♻️ If this helped you, consider reposting to help someone else get started.

  • View profile for Dr Priya Singh PhD💜MD(Hom.)

    Helping PhDs & researchers complete and publish high-quality research PhD mentor || Thesis reviewer || Academic writing expert Training research professionals in working with AI

    73,003 followers

    PhDs and researchers tired of Hitting Paywalls? There’s a whole world of free, open-access, reliable sources to access quality research without spending a dime. 👇 🔍 OPEN ACCESS REPOSITORIES & LIBRARIES Explore millions of papers and publications – totally free: ✅ CORE – Massive access to global research papers. ✅ Zenodo – Developed by CERN, great for data & papers. ✅ DOAJ – Peer-reviewed, open-access journals. ✅ ScienceOpen – Interactive publishing and discovery. ✅ PLOS – Nonprofit, open-access scientific journals. ✅ Open Science Framework (OSF) – Manage & discover research. ✅ OpenDOAR – Directory of academic open repositories. ✅ HAL – French open archive for scholarly documents. ✅ World Digital Library – Hosted by UNESCO, global resources. 📚 SUBJECT-SPECIFIC REPOSITORIES Find discipline-focused, credible content: ✅ arXiv.org – Physics, math, CS, finance & stats. ✅ bioRxiv – Biology preprints. ✅ medRxiv – Health sciences preprints. ✅ SSRN – Social sciences & humanities (30+ disciplines). ✅ RePEc – Economics and related sciences. ✅ CogPrints – Psychology, neuroscience, philosophy & more. ✅ ERIC – Education-focused repository. ✅ PubMed Central (PMC) – Biomedical & life sciences. ✅ EThOS – UK doctoral theses. ✅ EconStor – Economics preprints & working papers. ✅ DOAB – Directory of open-access academic books. ✅ OAIster – Catalog of open access digital resources. ✅ JURN – Arts, humanities, ecology, and more. 🔎 SMART SEARCH ENGINES When you need to dig deep: ✅ Google Scholar – The reliable classic. ✅ Semantic Scholar – AI-powered and super useful. ✅ OA.mg – 250M+ paper search engine. ✅ BASE – Indexes academic web content globally. ✅ WorldCat – Find libraries & research near you. 🧰 BROWSER EXTENSIONS & TOOLS No more “access denied” screens: ✅ Unpaywall – Finds free versions of paywalled papers. ✅ Open Access Button – Requests full-texts from authors. ✅ PaperPanda – One-click PDF access. ✅ EndNote Click – Full-text finder for references. ✅ Lazy Scholar – Discover open-access PDFs automatically. ✨ BONUS TIP ✅ ResearchGate – Request papers directly from authors and connect with the research community. 📌 WEBSITE LINKS PINNED IN THE COMMENTS Whether you're prepping for your next publication or deep in dissertation mode, these tools will save you time, money and frustration. SAVE THIS & REPOST to Help Others.

  • View profile for Zohra Orokzai

    Founder at Ketaab Publishing Press • Author • Advocate • Humanitarian Leader • Literacy & Community Impact

    15,382 followers

    Affordable Educational Resources in Virginia, DC, and Maryland Online Learning Platforms: Khan Academy: A free online resource offering courses in a wide range of subjects, including math, science, and humanities. Coursera: While many courses are paid, Coursera offers financial aid and free courses from universities and institutions worldwide. edX: Similar to Coursera, edX provides free access to courses from top universities, with options for verified certificates at a cost. Local Nonprofits and Initiatives: The Literacy Council of Northern Virginia: Offers free tutoring and classes for adults seeking to improve their literacy skills. College Access Programs: Various organizations in Maryland and Virginia provide guidance and support for students applying to college, often at no cost. OpenStax: Offers free, peer-reviewed, openly licensed textbooks primarily for introductory college courses. Subjects include mathematics, science, and social sciences. OER Commons: A comprehensive platform for finding and sharing open educational resources across various subjects and educational levels. LibreTexts: Provides free, open-source textbooks and educational materials, particularly strong in STEM fields. Mason Metafinder: A search tool that aggregates resources from multiple OER databases, including Open Textbook Library and OER Commons. Open Textbook Library: A collection of open textbooks that are either used at multiple higher educational institutions or affiliated with scholarly societies. #resources #database #education #affortable #textbook #free #platforms

  • View profile for Paul Kruchoski

    Director, Guidehouse | National Security & Diplomatic Technology Transformation | AI Strategy | Former Senior U.S. Diplomat

    6,620 followers

    In 2013, I helped launch the Open Book Project at the State Department—a partnership with the Arab League, MIT, Rice, and a small nonprofit called ISKME to make American educational resources freely available in Arabic. The premise was simple: if US taxpayers funded the creation of high-quality science and technology content, that investment should benefit as many people as possible. That project taught me something important: making resources available is only half the battle. Keeping them accessible over time is the other half. Government websites change. Links break. Content that took years and millions of dollars to develop can quietly disappear from its original home. Lisa Petrides, who led ISKME then and now, just launched something that addresses this directly: the Digital Public Goods Library (https://lnkd.in/e6PHUc3Y). It's exactly what it sounds like—an ark preserving publicly funded educational materials that might otherwise be lost. These resources carry open licenses, meaning educators worldwide can legally download, adapt, translate, and redistribute them to meet local needs. For anyone working in education, international development, or knowledge management: bookmark this. Whether you're a curriculum developer in Nairobi, a community college instructor in Nebraska, or a ministry of education official anywhere, this is a resource worth knowing about. The best part? Because these materials were funded by the public and openly licensed, there's no cost and no permission needed. Just access. That said, if you use them, consider supporting Institute for the Study of Knowledge Management in Education (ISKME) so that they can help ensure that these resources are available for the long haul.

Explore categories