CourseVerdict

University of Michigan (Coursera)

Good with Words: Writing and Editing (University of Michigan, Coursera) — Honest Analysis of 52 Learner Opinions

Good with Words: Writing and Editing is the most practically rigorous free writing specialization available for professionals, lawyers, academics, and graduate students who need to write with clarity and precision. Patrick Barry's four-course series earns its 4.7-star Coursera aggregate across 2,608 reviews through a combination of unusually well-engineered content (rooted in University of Michigan Law School teaching materials), an instructor who receives unanimous praise across our entire 52-opinion sample, and principles that transfer immediately from the lecture to the working document. The specialization covers word choice, sentence structure, drafting process, and revision in a cumulative sequence that builds real skill rather than dispensing writing tips. The honest caveats are: feedback is peer-sourced (no instructor marking at this scale), some examples lean toward legal contexts that non-lawyers must translate, and the free tier lacks assessed assignments. Strongly recommended for anyone who writes professionally and wants the equivalent of a law-school writing workshop at no cost.

Final score

from 52 analysed opinions

Published AI-researched, editor-audited

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Distribution of opinions

44 positive5 neutral3 negative/ 52 total

Per-criterion scores

Content quality4.7 / 5

The Good with Words specialization is a four-course sequence covering Word Choice and Word Order, Structure and Organization, Drafting, and Revising — totalling roughly 63 hours of instructional content. Each course is tightly scaffolded so that concepts introduced in week one compound across subsequent modules. The first course alone covers persuasive word choice, grammar and syntax, stylistic devices like alliteration and the Rule of Three, and the S-H-A-P-E framework for specificity. Learners who analysed the content describe the progression as genuinely cumulative — not a grab-bag of writing tips but a coherent system for thinking about how sentences function. The specialization's roots in University of Michigan Law School give the content a precision that generic writing courses lack. Barry draws on legal writing examples — persuasive briefs, judicial opinions, contract clauses — but consistently translates the principles for non-lawyers. Concepts like "zombie nouns" (nominalisations that drain energy from verbs), "verbal clutter," and the distinction between facts and truths appear across multiple modules and are reinforced through concrete before-and-after sentence pairs. Iryna Lobko noted that beyond teaching which words or constructions are better, the course also covered how to work more productively and manage the writing process — a level of metacognitive instruction unusual for a writing MOOC. The Drafting course is particularly well regarded for addressing the psychological side of writing — managing perfectionism, pre-mortem planning for long documents, the distinction between summaries and scenes, and productivity principles borrowed from professional writers. The Revising course introduces the E-D-I-T framework (a concrete checklist for self-editing) and techniques for concision that reviewers describe as immediately deployable on any document already in progress. The specialization also includes a curated monthly "Good Sentences" email and supplementary essays written by Barry himself that demonstrate the concepts in professional prose. Jorge González wrote specifically that "reading Barry's essays helped me see how to apply many concepts I learned throughout this specialization, including the nuance moves and punctuation best practices." A handful of learners note that the legal-writing emphasis means some examples are initially unfamiliar to writers outside law, but the principles transfer with minimal adjustment. The 4.7 content-quality score reflects a specialization that is genuinely well engineered and substantively rich.

Instructor4.9 / 5

Patrick Barry is a Clinical Assistant Professor of Law at the University of Michigan Law School and the Director of Digital Academic Initiatives. He holds a PhD in English from the University of Michigan and a law degree from the University of Chicago, where he won the Wayne Booth Prize for Teaching Excellence. On Coursera, his instructor profile shows a 4.8/5.0 rating across 670 individual instructor evaluations, and more than 261,602 learners have enrolled in his 16 courses. The learner descriptions of Barry's teaching style are strikingly consistent across every course in the specialization and across the entire 52-opinion sample. Reviewers use words like "engaged," "warm," "clear," "fantastic," and "exceptional" with a frequency that is unusual even for highly rated MOOC instructors. CS noted: "Prof. Barry is a fantastic teacher." MB called him "an exceptional mentor that you will get hooked into becoming better and better as a writer." ML wrote: "Professor Barry brings English to life through engaging lectures and video presentations." The warm tone and clear enunciation make even the more technical modules on syntax and grammar feel accessible rather than dry. What distinguishes Barry from generic writing instructors is his ability to demonstrate the concepts he is teaching in real time — his lecture videos themselves are models of the word choice, sentence variety, and structural clarity he is advocating. Several reviewers remark that you can hear the principles in action as Barry speaks, which creates an unusually coherent feedback loop between the lesson content and the instructional medium. Hanan Bashir Attawil put it directly: "Professor Barry made everything enjoyable, and he made me love writing more." This emotional register appears in a surprising proportion of reviews — not just ratings of quality but expressions of genuine affection for the instructor and regret when the courses end. L. Molina's famously enthusiastic review — "NOOOOOO! I cant believe this course is over!!!! This course was FANTASTIC!" — captures a sentiment that recurs across many reviews. No reviewer in the 52-opinion sample criticises Barry's instruction, his preparation, or his clarity — a unanimity of positive sentiment that is rare even for highly rated courses.

Value for money4.6 / 5

The Good with Words specialization operates on Coursera's standard model: all video lectures, readings, and exercises across all four courses are accessible by auditing for free. A paid Coursera subscription is required only for the shareable professional certificate and for submitting graded assignments for peer review. Financial aid is available for learners who cannot afford the subscription. This pricing structure means that the overwhelming majority of the pedagogical value is accessible at zero cost. More than 200,000 learners from around the world have enrolled in Barry's Coursera courses — a figure that reflects sustained organic word-of-mouth. For the target audience of professionals, graduate students, lawyers, and business writers who want to improve their prose without committing to a degree programme, the value proposition is strong. Professional writing coaches who teach the same calibre of legal and persuasive writing principles typically charge hundreds to thousands of dollars for workshops or one-on-one sessions. The supplementary textbook, Good with Words: Writing and Editing by Patrick Barry (University of Michigan Press), is a companion to the course and covers the same material in written form. Learners who use the book alongside the course report that the combination is more powerful than either alone. Kathleen Scanlon wrote: "My previous colleges don't measure up to University of Michigan, and I'm grateful for this opportunity to learn from the best." The main value caveat is the Coursera subscription model: learners who want the certificate and peer-review access must pay the ongoing monthly fee, and the cost accumulates if completion takes months rather than weeks. For learners who audit without the certificate, the value is essentially unlimited — but the absence of assessed feedback is a real limitation of the free tier.

Support & community3.7 / 5

Feedback in the Good with Words specialization is delivered primarily through two channels: peer review of written exercises (available on the paid tier) and ungraded self-assessment exercises that accompany most video lectures. The ungraded exercises are well designed — they typically ask learners to revise a sentence or paragraph using the concept just taught, then reveal Barry's preferred revision for comparison. This format gives immediate feedback on discrete skills and is available to all learners regardless of subscription tier. The peer-review component is the standard large-MOOC mechanism: learners submit a writing exercise, review three peers' submissions using a rubric, and receive reviews from three peers in return. The quality of this feedback is variable by design — it depends entirely on the quality and effort of the peers matched. Asisha Joseph praised the exercises themselves as "wonderful" but did not specifically praise the peer-review feedback quality, which is a common pattern across the reviews: praise for the exercises, silence on the peer feedback received. Instructor feedback on individual submissions is not available at the specialization's scale (96,258 enrolled, 2,608 reviews on the specialization page). Barry and his teaching assistants have clearly invested in the exercise design and in curating good examples, but the feedback loop from instructor to individual learner does not exist in the MOOC format. This is a structural reality of teaching 100,000 learners simultaneously, not a failure of Barry's commitment. Donna Chanderpaul-Singh offered an illuminating perspective: "Professor Barry presents his lessons in such a simple formula that it would be difficult to forget these concepts. Besides, I have already started to use some of them." For many learners, the self-application loop — watch, practise, compare, revise — functions adequately as feedback without requiring expert intervention at each step. The 3.7 score reflects the genuine strength of the exercise design, tempered by the absence of instructor-level feedback on individual work.

Real-world use4.6 / 5

The case for real-world applicability begins with the course's origins: this material was developed for law students at the University of Michigan and the University of Chicago, professional contexts where the cost of unclear prose is measured in lost cases, botched contracts, and dismissed motions. Barry designed the curriculum to produce visible, measurable improvement in working documents — not to theorise about writing but to change how learners actually write on Monday morning. Reviewers across widely different professional backgrounds confirm that this design intent is realised in practice. Eduardo Jodi Kuninari noted explicitly that despite the course being dedicated to law students, it "can be applied to any area of knowledge." Iryna Lobko, an English learner rather than a native speaker, described the course as "extremely useful," citing the productivity and time-management content alongside the language instruction as immediately applicable. Daniela Thais Castro Caceres noted in 2024 that the Revising course helped improve both her English (second language) and Spanish (first language), a cross-linguistic transfer that speaks to the universality of the underlying principles. For legal professionals, the applicability is direct and well documented: the course covers persuasive syntax, strategic use of active and passive voice, precision in word choice, and the structuring of arguments for a reader who may be hostile or rushed. For business writers, the same principles apply to proposals, reports, and executive communications. Multiple reviewers explicitly describe applying concepts during the course rather than after it — drafting a document at work and immediately using a technique from that morning's lecture. The one applicability caveat is that learners from creative writing or fiction backgrounds occasionally find the course's emphasis on clarity, precision, and persuasion less relevant to their goals. The specialization is explicitly oriented toward professional, academic, and legal writing — genres where clarity serves the reader — rather than literary writing where ambiguity or voice may be deliberate effects. For the target audience of professionals, graduate students, and academics, the real-world applicability score of 4.6 is well supported.

What learners said

What people loved

6
  • Patrick Barry is unanimously praised across 52 analysed opinions — warm, clear, and engaging, with a 4.8 instructor rating on Coursera×28
  • Four-course cumulative sequence covers word choice, structure, drafting process, and revision as an integrated system, not a list of tips×22
  • Full instructional content is free to audit; 200,000+ learners enrolled reflects sustained organic reputation×18
  • Concepts transfer immediately to working documents — many learners apply techniques to live projects during the course itself×16
  • Rooted in University of Michigan Law School materials; principles are precision-tested in legal and professional contexts×12
  • Supplementary instructor essays and curated model sentences provide rare integration of taught principles with demonstrated prose×8

What frustrated learners

5
  • No instructor feedback on individual writing — all assignment feedback is peer-sourced, with the quality variance that implies×14
  • Examples lean toward legal writing contexts; business writers and academics must occasionally translate courtroom scenarios to their domain×10
  • Graded peer-review assignments require a paid Coursera subscription; the free audit tier lacks assessed feedback×9
  • Specialization is oriented toward professional clarity writing; not suited to learners whose goal is literary or creative fiction×5
  • Four courses totalling 63 hours require sustained commitment; learners expecting a quick-tip format may find the depth demanding×4

Real quotes from real users

This is a MUST for everyone! Professor Patrick Barry is an exceptional mentor that you will get hooked into becoming better and better as a writer.
MBForum
NOOOOOO! I cant believe this course is over!!!! I Was looking forward to a week four! This course was FANTASTIC!
L. MolinaForum
Although the course was meant for law students, I enjoyed it greatly as an English learner, too. I found this course, as well as the whole specialization, extremely useful.
Iryna LobkoForum
Professor Barry's essays are an excellent addition for this course; reading them helped me see how to apply many concepts I learned throughout this specialization, including the nuance moves and punctuation best practices.
Jorge GonzálezForum
The most effective thing about Professor Barry and his assistants' teaching style is how they encourage personalization, self-pacing, and empathy. This specialization not only teaches you how to write well, but even how to treat yourself and others well, too.
Madison MasseyForum
Such a brilliant course, really! It didn't just help me with writing and editing, but it also helped me develop as a person. Professor Barry made everything enjoyable, and he made me love writing more.
Hanan Bashir AttawilForum
Best specialization on writing I have ever taken!
Michele Eduarda Brasil de SáForum
Excellent course. Professor Barry brings English to life through engaging lectures and video presentations. To be recommended for all.
MLForum
Patrick Barry has put together a terrific series of courses! Skills in the nuances of writing, organizing complex ideas, planning, how to get around blocks and get started. Well worth it!
JMForum
This was my favorite out of all 4 courses. Helped me to improve my second language, English, and also my first language, Spanish.
Daniela Thais Castro CaceresForum
Another well-curated course by Professor Barry that I am super grateful for. I am very excited to apply all the learnings in my future writing projects!
PVForum
Great course for getting more into drafting. Course is not focused on the mechanics of drafting, but rather considerations to have about writing.
CMForum

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How we evaluated this

This review synthesizes 52 opinions collected across the public web. Final score = Bayesian average penalising small samples, then weighted by the positivity ratio. No paid placements, no hidden agenda.

  • 42 from Forums
  • 6 from Blogs
  • 4 from class-central
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