The IndieWeb Atlas

Educational Resources

The original idea for this website was to collect all sorts of accessible educatonal resources into a single place - we believe in education for all, and wanted to create a one-stop-shop for anyone seeking to better themselves. While this project has grown considerably beyond that (people on the internet are just too interesting!), we still believe in providing those learning resources. You'll find them on this page.

Although in some ways, everything on this website is educational if you choose to learn from it. In that sense my original mission is fulfilled.

W3Schools

Extremely helpful coding tutorials. I use it constantly when modifying this very site.

Atomic Rockets

An extensive archive of information and tools relating to rocket science and space, primarily to help SF authors get their math right.

Alison

Certificate-providing educational courses, divded up by career. Intended to help you get your footing in any career you might want to pursue.

Arts & Letter Daily

Articles and opinion pieces in the humanities.

Photoskop

Free photography education.

Electronics Education

Beginners electrical engineering.

Udemy

Paid, certificate-providing courses on any subject you can imagine. I've learned 3d-modeling, massage routines, acting fundamentals, and more. Courses go on sale frequently. Please Note: Quality-control is not Udemy's strong suit, and a handful of courses can be downright scams. That said, there are hundreds of truly quality courses available. Always check the reviews before spending money.

Coursera

Real college classes from real universities. You can take individual classes for free, or pay a fee to get a certificate of completion that you can attach to a resume. I've taken a few classes on here myself; quality varies by instructor and university, but they did help me get into grad school.

CSU Long Beach Free Databases

A collection of free research databases, on a variety of topics.

MIT OpenCourseWare

Free course materials from hundreds of courses at MIT. The materials on offer depend on the class - some have full, recorded lectures, reading material, tests, and so on - others are pretty minimal.

JSTOR

The classic. A database of journals, books, and images. Good place for primary sources.