English for Research Publication Purposes vs Introduction to Academic Writing
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
English for Research Publication Purposes
Coursera (O.P. Jindal Global University) · Academic Writing
Introduction to Academic Writing
Per-criterion
The course is organised into four thematic modules that follow the natural arc of preparing research for international dissemination. The first module introduces the conventions of academic genre in English — why research writing in English follows specific structural and rhetorical patterns, and how awareness of genre expectations reduces revision cycles during journal submission. The second module focuses on the anatomy of a research article: crafting an effective title and abstract, writing an introduction that situates the contribution within a literature, and structuring a discussion section that answers the questions raised in the opening. The third module addresses the language mechanics of academic English: hedging and stance markers, passive constructions, citation integration, and the vocabulary patterns that differentiate publishable academic prose from informal writing. The fourth module covers oral conference dissemination — structuring presentations, managing questions in English, and adapting written arguments for spoken academic contexts. Learners consistently describe the content as structured and practically oriented. The course draws on English for Specific Purposes (ESP) methodology, reflecting the UAB Language Service's long-standing research tradition in academic English for non-native speakers. One recurring note in learner feedback is that the course covers a broad canvas in a relatively short runtime, which means some modules feel overview-level rather than deeply worked. Learners who arrive expecting sentence-level feedback on their own drafts may find the content better suited as a framework-building complement to their own writing practice.
The course is taught by members of the UAB Language Service (Servei de Llengües), a specialist unit that has delivered English for research writing programmes to UAB faculty and doctoral students for over two decades. The instructors — who include academic English specialists with applied linguistics backgrounds and extensive experience running in-person Research Papers courses across the sciences, social sciences, and humanities — bring professional credibility that is grounded in real institutional practice rather than generic EFL instruction. Jose Ygoa-Bayer, who co-instructs UAB's closely related English for Teaching Purposes MOOC (4.7 stars, 117,000+ enrolled learners), brings a research background in Communication Science and more than twenty years of specialist academic language teaching at a research-intensive university. The team's familiarity with the specific pressures faced by non-native English-speaking researchers publishing in international journals gives the course a credibility and relevance that more generic academic writing courses struggle to match. Learners from continental European, Latin American, and Asian research institutions describe the instructors as knowledgeable, calm, and accessible. The presentation style is described as measured rather than performative — appropriate for the course's academic audience. Occasional learner notes mention that the delivery is slightly formal compared to the more dynamic style of some commercial MOOCs, but the substantive quality of the guidance is consistently praised.
The course content is accessible via Coursera's standard model: audit track learners can access video lectures and reading materials freely, while graded assignments and the certificate of completion require either a Coursera Plus subscription or a one-time course fee. Financial aid is available through Coursera's standard application process, which makes the paid track accessible to learners from lower-income contexts. For the course's target audience — doctoral students and research staff at institutions without dedicated English for research writing support — the value proposition is strong. Equivalent face-to-face courses at the UAB Language Service are structured as 20-hour in-person programmes with admission requirements (minimum B2.2 language proficiency) and limited places. The MOOC format removes both the geographic constraint and the scheduling barrier. Compared with specialised academic English programmes at other institutions — Nature Masterclasses, academic writing workshops offered by publishers, or university continuing education programmes — the price point is significantly lower for comparable content depth. The UAB credential is recognised across European academic institutions and adds modest but genuine value for researchers building their professional profile. For a doctoral student preparing their first international journal submission, the course provides a structured framework that could meaningfully reduce the probability of a desk rejection based on presentation rather than research quality.
The primary assessed activity in the course is a peer-reviewed writing exercise: learners draft either an abstract or an introduction for a research article in their own discipline, then review two peers' drafts using a structured rubric aligned to the genre conventions taught in the course. This design is pedagogically coherent — requiring learners to act as reviewers sharpens their ability to apply genre criteria analytically, which transfers back to their own writing. In practice, however, peer review quality is uneven, as is the case with most MOOCs at this scale. Learners writing in highly specialised fields — niche engineering subdisciplines, for example — are often reviewed by peers without domain familiarity, which limits the reviewers' ability to comment on disciplinary appropriateness. Some learners report receiving feedback that addresses surface grammar rather than the structural and rhetorical dimensions the course emphasises. There is no instructor-graded track at the MOOC enrolment scale, and discussion forum activity — which could partially compensate through community engagement — varies by cohort. Learners who have already participated in small-group writing workshops or writing retreats may find the peer review mechanism underwhelming by comparison. For researchers at institutions with active writing centres or doctoral training programmes, the course's feedback mechanisms work best as a structured orientation rather than a substitute for expert mentorship.
The strongest dimension of this course is the direct alignment between its curriculum and the actual tasks researchers face when preparing work for international publication. Unlike general academic writing courses that teach essay structure, this MOOC focuses specifically on journal article conventions — the rhetorical moves of an introduction, the conventions of abstract structure across disciplines, the hedging language required by peer review culture, and the argumentative architecture of a discussion section. These are precisely the skills that non-native English-speaking researchers in European universities identify as the most significant barriers to international publication. Learners across disciplines — from life sciences to education research to engineering — report applying the course frameworks directly to manuscripts they were preparing during or immediately after the course. The module on conference dissemination is specifically valued by early-career researchers who have not had supervised practice presenting in English at international conferences and find the oral genre conventions as challenging as the written ones. UAB's institutional context adds practical relevance: the course reflects the challenges experienced by researchers at a multilingual European research university navigating the anglophone publication landscape, which resonates strongly with the majority of its target learners from non-native English-speaking research contexts. The frameworks taught are discipline- agnostic enough to apply across STEM and humanities, while remaining grounded in real publication norms rather than idealised academic prose.
Introduction to Academic Writing is a four-module, approximately 15-hour beginner course that covers an unusually wide range of writing genres for its size. Module 1 introduces the architecture of an academic paper — how claims are built, how evidence is deployed, and how academic conventions differ from informal writing — through a mix of short lecture videos and structured reading exercises. Module 2 addresses the literature review process in full: how to read and synthesise existing research, how to build an annotated bibliography, and how to use citation conventions accurately. Module 3 pivots to applied genres — op-eds, blog posts, and policy briefs — giving learners a foothold in writing for non-academic audiences while applying the same argumentative discipline. Module 4 covers the macro-structure of a dissertation and the conventions of journal article submission, including how to identify appropriate venues and understand peer-review expectations. The breadth is both a strength and a caveat. For a 15-hour course to attempt academic essay structure, literature review, annotated bibliography, policy brief writing, op-ed writing, dissertation architecture, and journal publication conventions is ambitious. In each individual module, the coverage is solid at introduction level — the videos are focused, the assignments are scaffolded, and the readings provide context — but learners who want depth in any one of these areas will need to go further. The course openly positions itself as an introduction, and on those terms it delivers: it names and organises the terrain of academic writing in a way that prepares learners to go deeper in specific areas. The peer-review assignments in Modules 1 and 3 are a genuine pedagogical strength on paper: learners submit drafts and review others' work, which is the standard method for developing metacognitive awareness of writing quality. In practice, as with most MOOCs, the peer-review pool is uneven, and the quality of feedback received depends heavily on the engagement of co-enrolled learners. The AI-graded assignments in Modules 2 and 4 test factual recall and structural recognition rather than the quality of extended writing itself, which is an honest reflection of what automated grading can assess. The result is a course where the content design is thoughtful but the assessment ceiling is constrained by scale.
The course is taught by Dr. Madhura Lohokare, Associate Professor and Director of the Centre for Writing Studies (CWS) at O.P. Jindal Global University in Sonipat, Haryana. Dr. Lohokare holds a PhD from Syracuse University, where she trained as a social anthropologist; her doctoral research examined urban exclusion, gender, and caste identity formation among young men in Pune, India. Her current research focuses specifically on critical writing pedagogies and, notably, the concept of care within writing instruction — a relatively uncommon research interest in a field that tends to focus on skills rather than on the relational dimensions of teaching writing. The CWS at JGU, which Dr. Lohokare directs, provides writing instruction and faculty development across all schools and levels of the university. This institutional role means her understanding of what students struggle with — at undergraduate, postgraduate, and faculty levels — is exceptionally broad. Her instructor rating on Coursera is 4.6/5 from 58 ratings, placing her in the top tier of the platform's academic writing instructors. Learner feedback on the teaching style is consistently warm. Reviewers describe the explanations as accessible and the course as "neatly woven" — an apt description for a curriculum that moves across four distinct writing genres without losing structural coherence. The academic background in anthropology, rather than English Literature or Linguistics, gives Dr. Lohokare's approach a distinctive empirical grounding: she treats academic writing as a social practice with specific purposes and audiences rather than as a set of rules to be memorised. One structural limitation is the absence of live interaction. As an asynchronous MOOC, there is no mechanism for learners to receive feedback directly from Dr. Lohokare on their own writing. The course forums exist for peer discussion, but learner reports suggest forum activity is moderate. For learners who most want expert guidance on their specific texts, this is the main gap between what the course can deliver and what in-person academic writing instruction would offer.
Introduction to Academic Writing is available free to audit on Coursera, with all four modules' video lectures and readings accessible without a subscription or payment. Graded assignments, peer-reviewed work, and the shareable completion certificate require either a Coursera Plus subscription (approximately USD 59 per month, covering all Coursera content) or a one-time certificate purchase. Financial aid is available for learners who cannot afford the certificate fee. At audit tier, the course delivers 15 hours of structured academic writing instruction from a credentialed university specialist, covering five distinct writing genres, at zero cost. That represents strong value by any benchmark. Paid academic writing development — university writing centres, private tutors, commercial MOOC courses outside the Coursera ecosystem — typically charges substantially more for comparable duration and depth. One notable caveat raised by a learner is that the certificate is designated as "non-credit," meaning it does not carry formal academic credit recognition at most institutions. For faculty members, researchers, or professionals seeking a credential that carries institutional weight, this is a genuine limitation. One reviewer described this designation as "a big demotivation and let down" for her use case as a faculty member. The credential value of the certificate is primarily its signal of completed learning, not academic credit — which is appropriate context for prospective learners to have before enrolling. O.P. Jindal Global University is a well-regarded private research university in India, ranked in the QS Emerging Europe and Central Asia rankings and consistently noted for its faculty development programmes. Accessing instruction from its writing studies faculty at no cost represents genuine value, particularly for learners in regions where university-level writing development has historically been inaccessible due to cost.
Feedback in Introduction to Academic Writing operates through two primary channels: AI-graded assignments and peer review. The AI-graded format used in Modules 2 and 4 — applied to exercises on citation formats, structural identification in literature reviews, and dissertation organisation — can provide immediate pass/fail or multiple-choice responses, but by definition cannot assess the quality of extended argument, voice, or analytical depth. These assignments test recognition of academic writing conventions rather than the learner's own writing competence. The peer-review components in Modules 1 and 3 — where learners submit original writing and evaluate peers' submissions against a structured rubric — are the only mechanism through which learners receive feedback on their actual written output. This is standard MOOC practice at this scale, and the rubric-based structure provides more consistency than fully open peer commentary. The quality of feedback received, however, varies depending on how engaged co-enrolled learners are at the time of submission. Some learners receive detailed, useful notes; others receive cursory acknowledgements that satisfy the rubric minimum without adding insight. There is no mechanism for direct instructor feedback on individual submissions. For a course specifically designed for learners who are new to academic writing — and who may therefore lack the self-assessment tools to identify their own structural or argumentative weaknesses — the absence of expert feedback on personal writing is a real constraint. The course's own content — particularly the scaffolded videos that walk through the stages of writing — serves as an indirect form of feedback by helping learners calibrate their expectations. But this is not the same as having a knowledgeable reader tell a specific learner what is and is not working in their draft.
The course's coverage of four distinct writing genres — academic essays, policy briefs, op-eds, dissertations — gives it unusually wide real-world applicability for a 15-hour beginner course. Module 3's dedicated focus on writing for non-academic audiences (policy briefs, op-ed articles, blog posts for general readers) is particularly noteworthy: most academic writing courses stay within the academic register throughout, whereas this course explicitly addresses the challenge of translating research-based knowledge into formats that decision-makers, journalists, and general readers can use. For learners who want to write in policy or advocacy contexts — researchers, NGO professionals, civil servants — this module has direct practical application. The literature review module (Module 2) addresses a skill that is immediately applicable to any research-based degree programme at any level. The ability to identify, summarise, synthesise, and cite existing research is a prerequisite for essays, reports, dissertations, and journal articles across all disciplines. Learners who complete Module 2 with attention have a working framework for this process that they can apply to their coursework directly. Module 4's coverage of dissertation structure and journal article conventions is useful for graduate students and researchers. At introduction level, it will not replace a doctoral seminar on research writing — but as a first orientation to the expectations of academic publication, it is practical and well-sequenced. The main limitation on real-world applicability is the course's orientation toward the social sciences and humanities. The examples used throughout the modules draw from these disciplinary traditions, and learners in STEM fields will find that their specific writing conventions (IMRaD structure in scientific papers, specific APA or Vancouver citation formats for lab sciences, data-results-discussion architecture) require discipline-specific instruction beyond what this course provides.
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