Seeing Through Photographs vs Photography Basics and Beyond: From Smartphone to DSLR
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 · Creative Arts
Seeing Through Photographs
Coursera · Creative Arts
Photography Basics and Beyond: From Smartphone to DSLR
Per-criterion
Six weeks of MoMA-curated material — behind-the-scenes studio visits, video interviews with artists and original reading lists — covering photography as art, science, documentary tool and social critique. Learners consistently praise the exceptional curation and the breadth of nearly 180 years of photographic history. One reviewer described it as "a really great way to get a beginners academic insight into photography." The only ceiling is that the content is rich enough to be demanding for casual learners.
Sarah Meister is MoMA's actual Curator of Photography — a credential that gives the course authority no non-museum online instructor can match. Her ability to contextualise photographs within broader cultural and historical narratives is praised throughout. Some learners note the course occasionally leans heavily on MoMA's institutional perspective, and her academic register can feel demanding for casual or very young learners.
Free to audit in full with no account required for video access. A Coursera subscription or one-time certificate purchase is only needed for graded assignments and the credential. For a museum-curator-led course covering nearly two centuries of photographic history with original artist interviews, the free-audit value proposition is exceptional. A small minority of reviewers felt the course was "just for selling books," but this is a fringe position not supported by the broader sentiment.
Quiz assessments are widely criticised for focusing on obscure MoMA institutional trivia — specific exhibition dates, artist names — rather than the critical thinking the course teaches. Written assignments are praised for analytical depth but faulted for being lengthy and sometimes misaligned with stated objectives. An academic analysis of learner data found quizzes "too factual" and assignments "too extensive" relative to learning goals.
For photographers seeking to deepen their analytical eye and contextual understanding, the course is frequently described as eye-opening and directly applicable to their practice. One Reddit user called it "amazing, not just to understand better photography but to apply those concepts to the way I take pictures." The limit is scope: it does not teach camera operation, exposure or post-processing, which confuses learners expecting a practical photography course.
Across five courses the fundamentals — exposure, the ISO/shutter/aperture triangle, depth of field, composition, light and basic Lightroom — are taught clearly and at a beginner-friendly pace. Glendinning and Sullivan are repeatedly praised for thoroughness. Capped because several reviewers flag the Lightroom and smartphone sections as dated, and courses 3-4 as padded with off-topic chatter.
Professors Peter Glendinning and Mark Sullivan are the most-cited strength in the first four courses — "thorough", "great advice", "easy to follow". The score is held back by a recurring complaint that the instructors are absent from the discussion forums and never personally critique work, most acutely in the capstone where they "make only token appearances".
Free to audit; ~$49/month subscription for graded assignments and the Michigan State certificate, completable in roughly two to three months. Strong value for a university-backed beginner curriculum. Capped because the capstone month adds little new content for the same monthly fee and a minority called the production quality "not worth the price".
Real shooting assignments, a web gallery and a portfolio-building capstone give learners genuine practice and shareable work. But project quality is bottlenecked by peer grading: many reviewers report superficial one-word critiques, plagiarised submissions, bot accounts and slow turnaround, which undermines the feedback loop the projects depend on.
Multiple learners report going from "knowing nothing" to confident shooting, selling prints, or switching toward photography seriously. The exposure and composition fundamentals transfer directly to any camera. Limited by the absence of business-of-photography content and by post-production teaching that lags current Lightroom versions.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.