Getting Started with Essay Writing vs High-Impact Business 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.
University of California, Irvine (Coursera) · Academic Writing
Getting Started with Essay Writing
Coursera · Academic Writing
High-Impact Business Writing
Per-criterion
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."
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.
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.
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.
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.
The course is organized into four logically sequenced modules covering the complete business writing lifecycle: foundations of effective written communication (clarity, directness, audience awareness), message strategy for positive, negative, and persuasive contexts, grammar and mechanics review, and report and presentation writing. Each module is built around short video lectures (typically 3–8 minutes), supplementary readings, and embedded quizzes that test comprehension immediately after each concept. Content quality is consistently praised by learners who are new to formal English writing. The module on grammar and mechanics is particularly noted for going beyond rote rule-listing to explain why specific conventions exist — an approach that resonates especially with non-native English speakers who have learned grammar academically but struggle to apply it in professional contexts. The module on positive, negative, and persuasive message strategies provides a practical taxonomy of business communication scenarios that learners report applying directly to workplace email and report writing. A recurring criticism in three-star reviews is that the content can feel overly introductory for writers with any prior formal training. Several reviewers noted that the quizzes in Week 2 contained ambiguous answer choices that were difficult to interpret, with one 1-star reviewer specifically pointing out grammatical errors in quiz materials — inconsistency that is at odds with a course on professional writing. Experienced business writers or those seeking advanced rhetorical instruction will likely find the scope insufficient. The course is best understood as a high-quality introduction rather than a comprehensive writing reference.
Sue Robins, M.S. Ed., is the primary instructor and brings over 25 years of professional experience as a trainer and facilitator across public and private sector organizations. Her instructional style is consistently described by learners as approachable, clear, and well-organized. Multiple reviewers specifically named her — unusual in MOOC reviews — as a reason for recommending the course, with comments ranging from "great and informative" to direct gratitude ("thanks to Mdm Sue Robins for conducting this great course"). Her strongest asset is her ability to ground abstract writing principles in recognizable workplace scenarios. The examples she uses — emails to management, persuasive memos, report structuring — resonate immediately with learners who are dealing with exactly those writing tasks in their jobs. This practitioner orientation distinguishes her instruction from more theoretically oriented academic writing courses. A small number of reviewers felt the instruction lacked depth in the later modules, and a handful of one-star reviews cited a mismatch between the course description and what was delivered after a content update that moved some materials behind a paywall. However, these are outlier experiences; the overwhelming majority of the 3,927 reviewers describe the instruction as clearly effective and well delivered.
The course is available for free audit on Coursera, granting access to all video lectures and most reading materials without payment. The paid Coursera certificate requires either a Coursera Plus subscription (approximately $59/month at time of writing, with financial aid available) or a standalone course purchase. For learners already subscribed to Coursera Plus, the marginal cost is zero. At approximately 7 hours of total instructional content, the course is compact by MOOC standards. This compactness is both a strength and a limitation: learners who want a quick, efficient introduction to business writing principles appreciate the tight scope; those expecting an extensive curriculum may feel the price-to-content ratio is unfavorable if purchasing as a standalone course. The free audit path, however, represents strong value for a self-motivated learner. One persistent criticism in negative reviews concerns Coursera's subscription billing model more broadly — learners have noted unexpected charges and difficulty canceling subscriptions. This is a platform-level concern rather than a course-quality issue, but it is worth factoring in when choosing between the free audit and the paid certificate path. The course itself, accessed through audit, consistently delivers what it promises at no financial risk.
The course relies on two feedback mechanisms: automated quiz grading after each video module, and peer-reviewed writing assignments that constitute the graded coursework. The automated quizzes provide immediate correctness feedback and are consistently praised for keeping learners engaged and testing retention in real time. Peer review, however, receives more mixed assessments. With a globally diverse enrollment of over 216,000 students at varying levels of English proficiency and writing experience, the depth and consistency of peer evaluations varies considerably. Several learners noted that peer feedback was "helpful when others gave constructive feedback" but also described the process as "occasionally frustrating due to inconsistent or unhelpful feedback." This is a structural limitation inherent to large-scale MOOC peer review, not specific to this course, but it meaningfully limits the depth of personalized editorial feedback learners receive on their extended writing. There is no evidence of active instructor engagement in course discussion forums in recent learner reports. Learners seeking substantive, expert feedback on their individual writing samples should supplement this course with additional resources. The automated grading infrastructure functions reliably, but the peer review system cannot substitute for editorial critique from a professional writer or educator.
Practical, immediate applicability is the most consistently cited strength in five-star reviews of this course. Learners across a wide range of industries — from administrative professionals to managers to non-native English speakers entering new roles — describe applying course principles to their workplace writing within days of completing each module. Email writing, in particular, is the most commonly cited area of immediate improvement: multiple learners report that the module on positive, negative, and persuasive messages directly changed how they structure routine workplace communications. The grammar and mechanics module addresses the specific errors that cause confusion in professional contexts — sentence-level clarity, punctuation, modifier placement, and pronoun agreement — with explanations oriented toward practical application rather than theoretical analysis. This makes the content transferable not only to business emails and reports but also to academic writing contexts, where the same clarity and conciseness principles apply. One learner with an executive background noted that the course "drastically improved my correspondences as well as presentations," and several reviewers in customer-facing roles described the content as directly relevant to communicating with clients and management. For learners whose primary goal is improving day-to-day professional English writing — and by extension, developing the foundational habits that underpin all formal writing — the course's practical orientation is its defining strength.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.