Writing and Editing: Word Choice and Word Order vs Academic English: Writing 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.
Coursera · Academic Writing
Writing and Editing: Word Choice and Word Order
Coursera · Academic Writing
Academic English: Writing Specialization
Per-criterion
Writing and Editing: Word Choice and Word Order
The course is dense with genuinely useful, sentence-level technique — deleting weak words, sharpening verbs, ordering clauses for emphasis — illustrated with sharp examples drawn from law, literature and rhetoric. Learners consistently call the material rich and eye-opening. The recurring caveat is volume: several reviewers say there is simply a lot to absorb, and that the density can make the structure feel cluttered if you are working through it quickly.
Patrick Barry, a law professor and director of digital academic initiatives at Michigan Law, is the strongest asset of the course. Reviewers describe him as knowledgeable, down-to-earth, funny and engaging, and his enthusiasm for the craft of editing comes through clearly. Almost no criticism is aimed at his teaching; the complaints are about format and pacing, not delivery.
Free to audit with full access to the video lessons, and a Coursera subscription only adds the peer-graded assignments and certificate. For a university course of this calibre, learners overwhelmingly rate value as excellent. The one reservation is that the graded practice — arguably where editing skill is cemented — sits behind the paywall.
The skills transfer directly to professional, legal and academic writing — anywhere precise, persuasive prose matters. Multiple reviewers, including experienced lawyers, report immediately tightening their own writing. The examples lean toward law and rhetoric, which is a strength for professional writers but means some illustrations feel less relevant to other fields.
The editing exercises are practical and directly tied to the lessons, which learners appreciate. The weak points are the same two that recur across Coursera writing courses: peer-reviewed grading can be inconsistent, and a minority found the assignment structure confusing relative to the volume of content being covered.
Academic English: Writing Specialization
A genuinely progressive five-course arc — grammar and punctuation, essay structure, advanced rhetorical modes, research and a full MLA research paper. Across our sample the methodical, step-by-step sequencing and the punctuation material draw repeated praise. Capped because the format is mostly slide-and-voiceover and the grammar course assumes prior knowledge rather than teaching from zero.
Tamy Chapman, Brad Gilpin and Helen Nam of UC Irvine are described as well-organized and clear, and Chapman alone carries a 4.8 instructor rating across her Coursera catalogue. Explanations are praised as concise and effective by ESL learners in particular.
Free to audit videos and handouts; the Coursera subscription (~$49-59/month, or via Coursera Plus) unlocks quizzes, peer feedback and the certificate. A university-backed five-course track at that price is strong value. Capped because the most-criticised part — peer grading — sits behind the paywall.
The clearest weakness. Feedback on every writing assignment is peer-graded, not instructor-graded, and reviewers repeatedly report multi-week turnaround, essays stuck in the review queue for months, and grading they call random or unfair. This is the single biggest drag on the final score.
Skills transfer directly to college essays, research papers and professional writing — the capstone produces a real 7-8 page MLA-formatted research paper with an annotated bibliography. Especially valued by non-native speakers who had never been taught a systematic way to structure an essay.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.