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Free online courses, programs

iTunes U includes lectures, TV programs

By Teresa Mears Sep 14, 2009 5:36PM

We've all thought about how much more we'd learn if we got a chance to go to college again as mature adults. One of the best places to be a student again is at iTunes U, which provides free access to thousands of audio and video files from some of the world's top universities.

 

The service also provides free access to public radio and TV programs, and this summer the Library of Congress began participating. You can listen to American Public Media's "Marketplace" or watch PBS programs, all free and at your own convenience.

 

You can watch and listen on your iPod or your home computer, using the iTunes program you use to buy music. Apple offers a guided tour of iTunes U to help you get started.

 

The Learn-Gasm blog has listed 50 terrific lectures to get you through the economic crisis, including a 13-part podcost by Dan Ariely of Duke University called Predictably Irrational, on how to control your behavior and make smart decisions even during a crisis.

 

Dara at The Do It Yourself Scholar offers a guide to iTunes U and says the best course collections are from Stanford University, the University of California at Berkeley, Yale University and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

 

Trent Hamm of partner blog The Simple Dollar finds good personal finance podcasts through iTunes' podcast section. He was even inspired to start his own free podcasts.

 

If you're home schooling or looking for good material for your elementary and high school-age children, you can find good K-12 material and teacher development resources, notes Maya Payne Smart at Edutopia.

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Having worked as a writer, reporter and editor for more than 25 years, Editor Julie Tilsner is the sort of person who can't help but correct grammar in Facebook postings and on billboards. She's written for BusinessWeek, the Los Angeles Times, Parenting, Redbook, AOL and others. She lives in Los Angeles County with her family and loves to drink wine and practice yoga, although not generally at the same time.

A writer for MSN Money since January 2007, Donna Freedman won regional and national prizes during an 18-year newspaper career and earned a college degree in midlife without taking out student loans. She also writes about smart money tactics for magazines and on her own site, Surviving and Thriving.

Mitch Lipka has been warning people about scams and shining light on questionable business practices for more than 20 years. Mitch, the consumer columnist for The Boston Globe, has also been a reporter and editor at The Philadelphia Inquirer, Consumer Reports, South Florida Sun-Sentinel and AOL. He won the 2010 New York Press Club award for best consumer reporting online and was honored in 2011 for his reporting on child product safety.

Marilyn Lewis is an award-winning writer with a passion for getting readers clear, straight information that helps them stay out of financial trouble. A former reporter for The San Jose Mercury News, she works from her home in Port Townsend, Wash. Contact her at MarilynLewis@Outlook.com.

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