Every AI education company says its teaching is better. Saying it costs nothing, which is exactly why saying it proves nothing. The only honest way to demonstrate teaching quality is to hand over real teaching, free, and let you judge, which is what this library is for.
Everything here is genuinely useful on its own: no crippled previews, no lesson that exists to sell the next lesson. If you never spend a dollar with the AI Faculty, this page should still have made you measurably better at using AI.
What is in the free library?
- Starter lessons: complete sample lessons drawn from catalogue courses, including foundations from AI Fundamentals and prompting technique from Prompt Engineering Mastery, the actual teaching, not a trailer
- Practical guides: downloadable, working documents: prompt patterns for common business tasks, an AI tool-evaluation checklist, and a starter acceptable-use policy template
- The AI glossary: plain-language definitions of the terms flying around your meetings, maintained in our insights glossary
- Weekly intelligence: the AI Faculty newsletter, practical AI developments filtered by people who deploy this technology for a living
Who is this for?
Professionals deciding whether structured AI learning is worth their time, teams evaluating the course catalogue before a corporate plan, and anyone who simply wants to get better at AI this week for free.
What happens after the free content?
Whatever you decide. The paths from here are the individual subscription for depth, or nothing at all, and the library stays open either way. The bet this page makes is simple: teaching quality, demonstrated, is the best marketing we could buy.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need to give an email address?
Browsable content is open; downloadable guides and the newsletter ask for an email, clearly marked, and that is the entire toll.
Is the free content watered down?
It is drawn from the same curriculum and held to the same standard; what paid learning adds is structure, depth, exercises, assessment, and credentials, not quality the free tier lacks.
How often is the library updated?
Continuously, alongside the paid curriculum; stale free content would advertise exactly the wrong thing.