Education Portal Claims a Million Students for Free Online CLEP Prep Courses

A company that offers free video courses to help students prepare for exams that will earn them college credit claimed that it had reached a million students in its first year of operation. Education Portal recently added its 18th course. Each course offers sets of short video clips as well as transcriptions and assessment materials that help participants prepare to take a CollegeBoard College-Level Examination Program (CLEP) exam in order to earn college credit and opt out of introductory courses.

Among the classes currently offered in complete form are Psychology 101 and Math 104: Calculus. "The psychology videos were a great study tool. I aced the CLEP exam and earned three college credits," said Claire Steiner, a nursing student who used the site's free videos to test out of prerequisites at her school.

Many of the programs are still under development by the company. For example, Math 101: College Algebra, is 85 percent developed and Psychology 102 is 70 percent done. Subjects such as United States History, College Composition, and Introductory Biology are expected to be available in complete form by the end of the year.

To boost its usage, Education Portal has also begun awarding a thousand dollars to the first 10 students each month who use its courses to earn credit by passing a CLEP exam. The CLEP program has 33 exams leading to college credit among many institutions of higher education.

"Many people have heard of AP exams but are unfamiliar with other options for earning low-cost college credit, such as CLEP," said Jessica Bayliss, director of education for Education Portal. "We're dedicated to breaking down barriers to education, and cost is one of the biggest barriers students face. Our courses are a free resource that students can use to earn credit at over 2,900 colleges, including DePaul University, University of Arizona, and Michigan State University."

The company's business model is to run advertising on articles and guide pages that it has published through its Web publishing division. "We advertise on these pages, and the revenues pay for the entire development of our free courses," Education Portal explained on a frequently-asked questions page. "Our free courses are funded by successes in other parts of our business and do not generate any revenue themselves. We understand the skepticism you may have when reading this, but really, there are no hidden revenue streams."

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • student and teacher using AI-enabled laptops, with rising arrows on a graph

    Student and Teacher AI Use Jumps Nearly 30% in One Year

    In a recent survey from learning platform Quizlet, 85% of high school and college students and teachers said they use AI technology, compared to 66% in 2024 — a 29% increase year over year.

  • stylized figures, resumes, a graduation cap, and a laptop interconnected with geometric shapes

    OpenAI to Launch AI-Powered Jobs Platform

    OpenAI announced it will launch an AI-powered hiring platform by mid-2026, directly competing with LinkedIn and Indeed in the professional networking and recruitment space. The company announced the initiative alongside an expanded certification program designed to verify AI skills for job seekers.

  • hand typing on laptop with security and email icons

    Copilot Gets Expanded Role in Office, Outlook, and Security

    Microsoft has doubled down on its Copilot strategy, announcing new agents and capabilities that bring deeper intelligence and automation to everyday workflows in Microsoft 365.

  • closeup of hands typing on laptop with AI imagery overlaid

    Copilot Fall Update Introduces New Features

    Microsoft has unveiled a major update to its Copilot AI platform, adding new features to make the system more personalized, collaborative, and integrated across its suite of products.