Graphic Design Specialization vs UI / UX Design Specialization
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
California Institute of the Arts (Coursera) · Design
Graphic Design Specialization
California Institute of the Arts (Coursera) · Design
UI / UX Design Specialization
Per-criterion
A genuinely rigorous art-school foundation in composition, typography, image-making and design history from CalArts faculty. The repeated caveat: it is print/book-oriented, theory-heavy and never touches interface or motion design, so several reviewers found the later weeks shallow or dated.
Michael Worthington, Anther Kiley and the CalArts team deliver calm, well-structured lectures that learners consistently praise for teaching you to think like a designer. The structural gap is the same as every Coursera track — no instructor ever reviews your work.
At ~$49/month with a stated 2-month path (most finish in 4-6), the all-in cost lands around $150-300, far below any design bootcamp or degree. You do need your own Adobe Creative Cloud or free alternatives like GIMP/Canva, which adds cost some reviewers did not expect.
The capstone (Brand New Brand) is a real end-to-end brand identity and the assignments build a tangible body of work. The ceiling is capped by peer-only grading that reviewers repeatedly call random or deficient, and by assignments many describe as relatively simple and abstract.
It teaches you to see and think like a designer, which is real and durable. But it deliberately skips software proficiency and modern digital/UI work, and independent reviewers warn the certificate alone will not build a portfolio strong enough to land a graphic-design job.
Visual-design-first curriculum with strong typography, colour and hierarchy coverage. Reviewers consistently flag it as a beginner survey — light on modern UX research, no front-end code, and several call the visual aesthetic dated.
Michael Worthington and Roman Jaster deliver calm, well-paced art-school lectures praised across our sample. The structural catch is that there is no instructor feedback on your work — every assignment is graded by other beginners.
At ~$49/month with a stated 2-month path (most finish in 3-4), all-in cost lands around $100-200 — one of the cheapest paid UX paths and dramatically below mentored bootcamps like Designlab or CareerFoundry.
Two end-to-end portfolio artefacts (a mobile interface and a responsive web project) are real and shareable. The ceiling is capped by peer-only grading and brief plagiarism complaints — reviewers report projects stolen and graded by people who don't know the field.
Gives you the vocabulary and the visual instincts of an art-school designer. Real-world job translation is the weakest area — a 2019 Hacker News post documents a graduate building a CalArts portfolio for two years and still being rejected as 'too junior'.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.