iversity

Learning for Live: Hailed as the “Coursera of Europe,” Berlin-based iversity has partnered with European and international universities to offer academic courses for free. The company has recently added certificates and verification of course completion for most of its classes, allowing students to verify course participation and learnings with an official document. Costs vary and there are a few free options as well

InvasiveCode

Learning for Live: Five-day courses in development for Apple's iOS and tvOS. The material covers Swift and Objective-C and goes into several Apple toolkits. Each class is limited to ten students. Students get three months of technical support after completion.

Skillcrush

Comic's Collector: Learn coding skills from Skillcrush's immersive three-month courses. Each course focuses on the skills needed for a specific career, like front end developer or freelance WordPress developer.

Open Yale Courses

Learning for Live: Yale University makes a broad range of its lectures and classes available through the Open Yale Courses program. Each course includes a full set of class lecture videos featuring Yale professors, as well as course materials including syllabi, suggested readings, exams, problem sets, and answer keys. There were dozens of courses available at the time of writing this and Yale says it regularly rotates available classes and adds new options.

Hack Design

Learning for Live: Hack Design is a design course program designed to help you create a career in design and then continue to grow. Its main offering is a weekly design lesson delivered via email. Most content is free, and they do provide a curated list of fundamental courses in its Lessons 101 offering.

Skillshare

Comic's Collector: Gain creative, business, or tech skills from over 30,000 online courses. The site boasts expert instructors like author Roxane Gay and illustrator Yuko Shimizu.

MIT's OpenCourseWare

Learning for Live: Massachusetts Institute of Technology is one of the most prestigious universities in the U.S., but did you know you can access many of its learning materials for free? You won't get a degree, but you can follow along with MIT classes through the OpenCourseWare project.

Sitepoint

Learning for Live: This site is best for web developers looking to expand their skillset. Users pay a monthly membership fee to access video tutorials, online books, courses, and community discussions.