Short courses for everyday digital confidence.
Choose a course, follow a learning path, or save something for later. This library is designed to grow over time without making the experience feel complicated.

Find the right course.
Use the filters to narrow the library. Every Open button goes to the course overview, and every Start button begins the course.
Not sure where to start?
These paths organize courses and resources around real situations.
Stay Safe Online
Start here if you want the safest first path through KeepUp Academy.
Help a Parent or Loved One
Use this path when you are supporting someone else without taking over.
Build Everyday Tech Confidence
A simple path for building confidence across emails, messages, video calls, and shopping.
What you'll find in our courses
KeepUp Academy courses are written specifically for older adults and the family members helping them learn. We focus on online safety because it's the area where seniors lose the most money, attention, and confidence — but we treat the material like adults, not like fragile beginners.
Each course is broken into short lessons (10–15 minutes each). You can stop and come back, and your progress is saved automatically. Most learners finish a full course in 2–3 hours spread across a week or two.
Common questions
Do I need to be "good with computers" to take these courses?
No. The courses are designed for people who use a phone or computer but don't necessarily understand all of it. If you can read this page, you can take any of our courses. Each lesson explains every term it uses.
Will I get a certificate?
Yes. Each course awards a printable certificate when you complete all the lessons. You can show it to family members, frame it, or just keep it as a record. Certificates are saved to your account and travel with you across devices.
What if I forget what I learned?
You can re-take any lesson any time. We also surface short practice scenarios on your home page so you keep your skills fresh without going back through full lessons.
Can a family member take the course with me, or for me?
Family members can absolutely take it with you — many do. But the courses are designed for the person who'll be doing the day-to-day computing. Watching someone else doesn't build the skill; doing it yourself does. If you're a family member learning so you can help someone else, see our helper resources.
