Filter by
Subject
Required
Language
Required
The language used throughout the course, in both instruction and assessments.
Learning Product
Required
Build job-relevant skills in under 2 hours with hands-on tutorials.
Learn from top instructors with graded assignments, videos, and discussion forums.
Learn a new tool or skill in an interactive, hands-on environment.
Get in-depth knowledge of a subject by completing a series of courses and projects.
Level
Required
Duration
Required
Skills
Required
Subtitles
Required
Educator
Required
Results for "information+literacy"
Università di Napoli Federico II
Skills you'll gain: Writing
University of Houston
Skills you'll gain: Storytelling
Coursera Project Network
Skills you'll gain: Leadership and Management
- Status: Free
University of London
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Skills you'll gain: Research and Design, Human Computer Interaction, Visual Design
- Status: Free
Commonwealth Education Trust
Skills you'll gain: Human Learning, Writing
- Status: Free
DeepLearning.AI
- Status: Free
University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
- Status: Free
University of Copenhagen
The University of Hong Kong
Skills you'll gain: Journalism
Arizona State University
Skills you'll gain: Writing, Planning
- Status: Free
The University of Tokyo
In summary, here are 10 of our most popular information+literacy courses
- English Intermediate B1: Università di Napoli Federico II
- Powerful Tools for Teaching and Learning: Digital Storytelling:Â University of Houston
- Setting Up a Digital Library with EPIC:Â Coursera Project Network
- Get Interactive: Practical Teaching with Technology:Â University of London
- An Introduction to Accessibility and Inclusive Design:Â University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
- Writing for Young Readers: Opening the Treasure Chest:Â Commonwealth Education Trust
- Knowledge Graphs for RAG:Â DeepLearning.AI
- Ubiquitous Learning and Instructional Technologies:Â University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
- Academic Information Seeking:Â University of Copenhagen
- Making Sense of the News: News Literacy Lessons for Digital Citizens:Â The University of Hong Kong