CourseVerdict

Getting Started with Essay Writing vs How to Write and Publish a Scientific Paper (Project-Centered Course)

Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.

University of California, Irvine (Coursera) · Academic Writing

Getting Started with Essay Writing

4.2/ 5 · 30 opinions
23 positive4 neutral3 negative/ 30 total

Coursera · Academic Writing

How to Write and Publish a Scientific Paper (Project-Centered Course)

4.1/ 5 · 45 opinions
34 positive7 neutral4 negative/ 45 total

Per-criterion

Content quality4.3 / 5

The course is a well-structured introduction to three core academic essay types — compare/contrast, cause/effect, and argument — taught topic by topic across roughly 18 hours of short videos, with a clear focus on thesis statements and well-developed body paragraphs. Reviewers consistently praise how it "starts from level zero," which makes it genuinely useful for beginners and non-native speakers. The recurring content caveat is depth: a minority of stronger writers find the material and sample essays too basic, with one calling the samples "disappointingly trivial."

Instructor4.5 / 5

Tamy Chapman and Helen Nam, both ESL and teacher-training instructors at UC Irvine's Division of Continuing Education, are repeatedly praised for clear, methodical explanations delivered in short, digestible videos. Their carry the highest instructor ratings on aggregator pages (around 4.8). The teaching itself is rarely criticised — the friction learners report is structural (peer grading and lack of staff contact), not about the quality of the lectures or the instructors' delivery.

Value for money4.1 / 5

Lectures and practice activities are free to audit, and the course is bundled into the Academic English: Writing specialization on Coursera's monthly subscription, with a 7-day free trial. For a university-backed course from UC Irvine, that is strong value. The honest deduction is that to take the graded quizzes and submit essays for feedback you must pay/subscribe, and the feedback you then get is peer-based rather than from the UCI instructors — so the paid tier delivers structure and a certificate more than expert correction.

Feedback quality2.9 / 5

The weakest and most consistently criticised dimension. All writing assignments are peer-graded, with no instructor involvement. Reviewers report long queues (essays "sitting in a student review queue for two months"), 3-4 week lags, inconsistent peer evaluations, and disappointment that corrections come from fellow students rather than "experienced teachers/instructors." Some also note the absence of a discussion forum. The teaching is excellent; the feedback loop is where the course visibly falls short.

Real-world use4.2 / 5

The essay types taught — compare/contrast, cause/effect, and argument — map directly onto the writing demanded in college classes and standardized academic contexts, which is exactly the course's stated goal. Non-native English speakers in particular report that the systematic, structured approach made them able to "write essays properly and much more confidently." As Course 2 of a four-course specialization, it functions best as a foundation that the later research and advanced-writing courses build on, rather than a complete standalone academic-writing program.

Content quality4.3 / 5

The course is divided into four tightly structured weeks. Week one introduces the academic publishing ecosystem — how journals operate, what peer review means in practice, and the ethical obligations of researchers submitting work. Week two addresses the pre-writing phase: identifying genuine contribution, conducting a literature review, and framing the research question so it is clearly positioned within the existing body of knowledge. Week three covers the anatomy of a journal article — abstract, introduction, methods, results, discussion and references — together with hands-on guidance for managing bibliographies with Zotero. Week four completes the journey with post-writing quality assurance: the signature submission checklist that learners build incrementally throughout the course and then apply to their own draft. The content was conceived by a team of six École Polytechnique PhD candidates under the scientific supervision of Mathis Plapp, a CNRS senior scientist. That origin shows in the material: it is written from the perspective of people who were actively navigating the publication process at the time of recording, which gives it a pragmatic, insider tone that pure textbooks rarely match. Learners from STEM, social sciences and humanities all report finding the framework transferable, though the examples lean toward natural-science contexts. One recurring mild criticism is that the recorded lectures have not been substantially updated since the course launched in 2016, so some platform-specific screenshots and minor conventions reflect an earlier era of publishing. Core principles remain fully valid.

Instructor4.1 / 5

Mathis Plapp is an Assistant Professor in the Physics Department at École Polytechnique and a senior scientist at the French national research centre CNRS. He serves as scientific supervisor for the course, with the bulk of the teaching performed by the PhD-candidate team who designed the MOOC. That dual structure — practising researchers delivering content they have personally applied — is one of the course's clearest differentiators. Learners consistently describe the instructors as credible and relatable. The fact that the content was created by PhD students who were simultaneously trying to get their own papers published gives the advice an authenticity that is hard to manufacture. Presenter delivery is described variously as "clear," "systematic," and "to the point," though some viewers find the presentation style somewhat dry compared to more performance-oriented MOOC instructors. No learner in our sample questions the subject-matter expertise of the team; occasional criticism centres on pacing — some modules feel dense relative to their running time.

Value for money4.5 / 5

The full instructional content is free to audit with no paywall. An optional Coursera certificate is available via the paid subscription or a one-time fee, and financial aid is available for learners who apply. Given that the course requires roughly seven to ten hours of study plus approximately ten hours of project work — a total commitment of under three weeks for most learners — the value density is very high. More than 210,000 learners have enrolled, and the 4.6 Coursera rating from over 2,700 individual reviews confirms sustained satisfaction across a large, diverse audience. For a PhD student preparing their first journal submission, avoiding even one avoidable rejection letter represents a return on investment that far exceeds the course's cost. The free Zotero integration guidance alone saves many first-time authors hours of bibliography management effort. The optional certificate holds modest market value on its own but can serve as a useful credential supplement for early-career researchers.

Feedback quality3.2 / 5

The primary assessed component is a peer-reviewed abstract submission: each learner writes their own abstract based on their existing research project, then reviews two peers' abstracts using a structured rubric. This mirrors the actual peer-review process at journals, which is an elegant design choice — learners experience the reviewer's perspective as well as the author's, building empathy for both sides of the process. However, in practice the quality of peer feedback varies considerably. As with most large MOOCs, the anonymity and voluntary engagement of reviewers means some learners receive thorough, constructive critiques while others receive only minimal comments. There is no instructor-led feedback loop on individual submissions at this enrolment scale, which is understood but still noted as a gap by learners who want expert commentary on their specific draft. The checklist exercise at the end of week four is self-assessed, which limits its corrective power even though it is highly practical as a standalone tool.

Real-world use4.6 / 5

This is the course's strongest dimension. The entire curriculum is structured around a real work product — learners are expected to have an existing research project and they apply every lesson to that project in real time. The output of the course is not a hypothetical exercise but a draft structure, a Zotero-managed bibliography, a written abstract, and a personalised submission checklist ready for immediate use. Learners across disciplines — chemistry, social sciences, engineering, public health — report applying the framework directly to papers they were actively preparing for submission. The journal-selection module, which walks through scoping, impact factor considerations, and matching a paper's contribution to a target journal's readership, is specifically called out by multiple reviewers as something they immediately put to use. Gerges Tannous, a PhD candidate who reviewed the course on Medium in 2016, published his personalised checklist on GitHub and credited the course framework as its basis. The practical orientation is embedded in the course's project-centred design philosophy from the first lecture.

Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.