Coursera has
12-Month Coursera Plus Subscription on sale for
$199 (Discount applied at checkout).
Thanks to Community Member
TalentedCrowd330 for sharing this deal.
Product Details:
- With your Coursera Plus subscription, you get unlimited access to more than 10,000 courses, Projects, Specializations, and Professional Certificate programs in a variety of domains, including data science, business, computer science, health, personal development, humanities, and more. The majority of courses on Coursera are included. Certain courses, Specializations, and Professional Certificate programs are excluded. Coursera Plus also does not include degrees or MasterTrack Certificate programs. To determine if a particular offering is included, look for the Coursera Plus badge, or check this list of included content.
Top Comments
They both offer a lot of certificate only courses. I think Coursera offers a higher number of college credit or partnered industry certifications etc than LinkedIn learning does. That's based on using LinkedIn learning about 2 years ago vs using Coursera within the past 6 months though so LinkedIn learning may have expanded the number of college credit courses and such in that time as well.
Based on my experience Coursera is much more involved in a community sense where you review fellow students work and they review yours. For college credit courses your work is eventually reviewed by actual college staff but normally only at the very end as they don't want to waste time reviewing work for someone dropping out after getting a couple certifications but not the actual college license or recognized certificate for completion of the entire course. I don't recall LinkedIn learning having much in the way of real time feedback or getting to review other people's work so you had a better idea of what good vs bad looked like when doing your own assignments.
Depending where you live your public library, dshs, worksource, unemployment, etc may offer free access to these services as well. LinkedIn learning and Coursera to my knowledge are the two most common or popular ones for companies or government agencies etc to contract with for free access.
Are the certificates and what not here really better accepted?
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Are the certificates and what not here really better accepted?
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Are the certificates and what not here really better accepted?
They both offer a lot of certificate only courses. I think Coursera offers a higher number of college credit or partnered industry certifications etc than LinkedIn learning does. That's based on using LinkedIn learning about 2 years ago vs using Coursera within the past 6 months though so LinkedIn learning may have expanded the number of college credit courses and such in that time as well.
Based on my experience Coursera is much more involved in a community sense where you review fellow students work and they review yours. For college credit courses your work is eventually reviewed by actual college staff but normally only at the very end as they don't want to waste time reviewing work for someone dropping out after getting a couple certifications but not the actual college license or recognized certificate for completion of the entire course. I don't recall LinkedIn learning having much in the way of real time feedback or getting to review other people's work so you had a better idea of what good vs bad looked like when doing your own assignments.
Depending where you live your public library, dshs, worksource, unemployment, etc may offer free access to these services as well. LinkedIn learning and Coursera to my knowledge are the two most common or popular ones for companies or government agencies etc to contract with for free access.
They both offer a lot of certificate only courses. I think Coursera offers a higher number of college credit or partnered industry certifications etc than LinkedIn learning does. That's based on using LinkedIn learning about 2 years ago vs using Coursera within the past 6 months though so LinkedIn learning may have expanded the number of college credit courses and such in that time as well.
Based on my experience Coursera is much more involved in a community sense where you review fellow students work and they review yours. For college credit courses your work is eventually reviewed by actual college staff but normally only at the very end as they don't want to waste time reviewing work for someone dropping out after getting a couple certifications but not the actual college license or recognized certificate for completion of the entire course. I don't recall LinkedIn learning having much in the way of real time feedback or getting to review other people's work so you had a better idea of what good vs bad looked like when doing your own assignments.
Depending where you live your public library, dshs, worksource, unemployment, etc may offer free access to these services as well. LinkedIn learning and Coursera to my knowledge are the two most common or popular ones for companies or government agencies etc to contract with for free access.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank todor.papazov
Here is the link:
https://partnerships.ed
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Here is the link:
https://partnerships.ed
Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank todor.papazov
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