Interaction Design Specialization vs Figma Essential Training
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 · Design
Interaction Design Specialization
LinkedIn Learning · Design
Figma Essential Training
Per-criterion
Interaction Design Specialization
The specialization comprises six content courses followed by a capstone project: Design: Creation of Artifacts in Society; Human-Centred Design: an Introduction; User Interface Design; Input and Interaction; User Research and Design; and Designing, Running, and Analyzing Experiments — plus the Interaction Design Capstone Project developed in collaboration with Instagram. This curriculum arc takes learners from design philosophy through to evidence-based, statistically rigorous evaluation of interactive systems, a scope that few comparable online programmes match. The foundational courses covering design theory, prototyping, and user research draw consistent praise for their clarity and the quality of the illustrative examples drawn from real-world products and historical design artefacts. Learners transitioning from graphic or visual design into UX find the human-centred design framing particularly valuable for establishing a principled approach to interactive product design. The final course — Designing, Running, and Analyzing Experiments — is exceptional in its rigor. It is also exceptionally difficult, requiring competence in statistics, A/B testing methodology, and data analysis that many design-background learners do not bring to the programme. Multiple reviewers describe it as the hardest online course they have taken, and a meaningful proportion of learners who complete the first five courses either audit the sixth or supplement it with statistics resources before attempting full completion.
Scott Klemmer is a Professor of Cognitive Science and Computer Science & Engineering at UC San Diego, where he co-founded and serves as Associate Director of the Design Lab. He has authored or co-authored more than 40 peer-reviewed publications, eight of which received best paper or honourable mention awards at premier HCI conferences including CHI and UIST. He also co-founded Coursera itself alongside Daphne Koller and Andrew Ng, making him one of the architects of the MOOC movement he now teaches within. Learners consistently describe Klemmer's lectures as intellectually engaging, well-paced, and grounded in a genuine passion for design as both a practice and a discipline of enquiry. Reddit discussions in r/learndesign and r/UXDesign frequently recommend him specifically: "People really like Scott Klemmer" and "Scott Klemmer is pretty good at online classes" are representative of the consensus. His ability to connect design history, cognitive science, and contemporary product practice within a single coherent narrative is described as unusual among online instructors. The one limitation noted by some learners is that Klemmer's delivery style in earlier courses leans toward the academic lecture format, which suits learners who enjoy rigorous theory but may feel slow for those seeking rapid practical tooling tutorials.
The specialization is fully auditable for free on Coursera, giving access to all video lectures, quizzes, and reading materials across all seven components. A Coursera Plus subscription or per-specialization certificate purchase is required to submit graded assignments and earn the shareable certificate. For learners with Coursera Plus (approximately $59/month or $399/year), the specialization represents outstanding value for the depth and prestige of the credential. The most compelling value argument is the UCSD postgraduate credit option. Students who complete the specialization and pass a portfolio review examination administered by UCSD can receive credit for up to two courses in the UCSD CSE Master's programme. For learners considering postgraduate study in HCI or UX, this pathway represents an extraordinary return on a Coursera subscription — earning accredited graduate credit through a world-ranked research university at MOOC cost. The primary cost consideration is time, not money. The specialization is estimated at approximately 10 months at five to six hours per week — a substantial commitment that learners should factor into their decision, particularly given that the final experiment design course may require additional time beyond the course estimates.
The specialization's practical applicability is among its most consistently praised attributes. Learners report that skills acquired — rapid prototyping, heuristic evaluation, user interview methodology, A/B test design, and quantitative usability analysis — transferred directly into professional UX practice within the programme itself. The emphasis throughout on designing for real constraints and evaluating designs against real user data, rather than purely aesthetic judgement, produces graduates with the kind of evidence-based design vocabulary that design teams and product organisations value. Multiple Quora respondents who completed the specialization describe it as more practically rigorous than the Google UX Design Professional Certificate, particularly for learners who plan to work in research-heavy UX environments or at organisations that make data-driven design decisions. The Pixel Lens Design Medium review noted that one reviewer found the UCSD specialization "very interesting and exciting, even more so than the Google UX Specialization they took a few months prior." The UCSD postgraduate credit pathway adds further real-world applicability by making the specialization a legitimate accelerator for learners pursuing a master's degree in HCI, human factors, or a related field.
Peer-reviewed assignments form the primary assessment mechanism throughout the specialization. Learners submit design artefacts — wireframes, prototypes, research plans, and statistical analyses — and review several peers' submissions in return. The quality of peer feedback, as with all large-scale MOOC peer review systems, is inherently variable: some learners receive detailed, constructive critique; others receive cursory or generic responses. The Coursera discussion forums for individual courses provide a space for learner questions, and active cohorts in earlier offerings produced rich discussion threads that remain searchable. More recent cohorts tend to see lower discussion volume as the specialization matures. Learners in active Reddit communities such as r/UXDesign and r/learndesign fill some of this gap by providing peer support to each other. The Instagram capstone partnership provides a unique feedback channel: select capstone projects are chosen to be reviewed by Instagram designers, giving a small number of learners direct professional input. This is exceptional for any online course and represents a meaningful support differentiator, even if most learners will not have their project reviewed by the company.
Figma Essential Training
The course covers Figma essentials — file setup, frames, shapes, text, images, masks, layers, components, constraints, and a basic interactive prototype — in a logical, tightly paced sequence. The 2025 edition adds a section on Figma AI features, which reviewers welcomed. However, at 1h 37m it is genuinely thin: auto layout, variables, design systems, and developer handoff are absent. Multiple independent reviewers flag it as a starting point that must be supplemented, not a complete Figma education.
Garrick Chow spent over 15 years as a Senior Staff Instructor at LinkedIn Learning (formerly Lynda.com), authoring more than 200 video-based courses covering Adobe Creative Cloud, productivity tools, and design workflows. Learners across platform reviews consistently describe the teaching style as clear, demo-driven, and accessible without oversimplifying. The course's 4.7-out-of-5 star rating across nearly 7,000 learner ratings is a strong signal of execution quality at the instructor level.
LinkedIn Learning costs $29.99/month or $239.88/year (effective $19.99/month annually) as a standalone subscription; it is also included in LinkedIn Premium Career ($29.99/month) and available free via many public library cards. For learners who already have a LinkedIn Premium subscription, the course is essentially free and excellent value. For learners paying the standalone fee just for this course, the value is weak — 1h 37m of content at $29.99 for a single month is expensive per learning-hour compared to an equivalent Udemy course. The subscription unlocks 20,000+ other courses, which changes the equation significantly for prolific learners.
The course builds toward a functional multi-screen prototype using a restaurant app scenario, with one exercise file provided. Reviewers appreciated leaving the course with a completed mini-project. However, the exercise is instructor-led and offers limited creative latitude — learners replicate the instructor's screens rather than designing their own concept. For portfolio purposes, the output requires significant additional work to be genuinely presentable.
The skills taught — frames, components, constraints, basic prototyping — are genuinely foundational and immediately transferable to real Figma workflows. Reviewers confirm that even the older 2021 version's workflow concepts remain valid today because Figma's underlying design model has not changed. The main gap is that workplace Figma usage involves auto layout, design tokens, branching, and dev mode handoff, none of which the course covers.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.