Ideas from the History of Graphic Design vs Figma UI UX Design Essentials
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
CalArts (California Institute of the Arts) on Coursera · Design
Ideas from the History of Graphic Design
Skillshare · Design
Figma UI UX Design Essentials
Per-criterion
The course is a condensed survey built around four well-chosen themes: visual branding and the birth of mass marketing in the late-19th-century industrial era, the Bauhaus (1919-1933), American Modernism and corporate identity seen through designers like Paul Rand and Lester Beall, and post-war graphic radicalism and visual subcultures. Reviewers repeatedly call it interesting, well put together, and a genuine education in why design looks the way it does. The honest mark-downs are scope and pacing: it is almost entirely Western/Euro-American, some lectures ramble without making their through-line explicit, and it predates a broader, more global treatment of the field.
Louise Sandhaus, former Program Director of the Graphic Design Program at CalArts, and Lorraine Wild bring real authority — Sandhaus is a published design historian whose work champions overlooked makers. Learners praise the depth and the wide range of images used to land each point. The recurring complaint is delivery rather than expertise: the instructors are soft-spoken and several reviewers found the audio low and the lectures occasionally meandering, which dents an otherwise strong teaching reputation.
The course is free to audit on Coursera and sits behind the standard subscription (around 64 USD per month) only for graded assignments, peer-review feedback and the certificate. For four weeks at roughly 2-3 hours a week it delivers a coherent, image-rich grounding in design history that Creative Bloq ranked at the very top of its best free graphic design courses. The value caveat is that there is no hands-on design output, so what you buy is knowledge and context rather than a portfolio piece.
This is the course's most divisive axis. Assignments are research and writing-based — visual research, written analysis and peer-reviewed reflections — with no actual design production. Some learners loved that ("a nice change"), but a steady stream wanted to create rather than write, and several found the peer-graded prompts ambiguous, with classmates misreading the briefs. If you want to make things, this is not that course; if you want to think like a designer, the exercises do their job.
Historical literacy is a real professional asset — it gives designers a vocabulary, a sense of lineage, and a way to justify choices — and reviewers credit the course with sharpening their design thinking and analysis. But it is a four-week survey, not a credential employers screen for, and it produces no portfolio artefact. Its career value is as foundational context inside a broader graphic-design path, especially the wider CalArts specialization, not as a standalone resume line.
111 lessons span UX/UI basics through advanced auto layout, components, variants and interactive prototyping. Comprehensive for a subscription course; slightly capped because Figma ships new features faster than course updates follow.
Daniel Scott is Adobe-certified with 14+ years of teaching experience and founder of Bring Your Own Laptop. His methodical, shortcut-dense style is consistently praised by independent reviewers as clear, practical, and professional.
The Skillshare subscription (~$14/month) also unlocks the companion advanced Figma course at no extra cost. No completion certificate and the rising subscription price are the main drags on value.
Real desktop and mobile projects produce shareable portfolio pieces with genuine creative latitude. Depth of feedback is limited compared to mentored programmes; learners self-assess their output.
Auto layout, components, variants, constraints and prototyping are exactly the skills hiring managers test for. The frames-over-groups discipline and shortcut density transfer immediately to professional Figma workflows.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.