CourseVerdict

English Grammar and Style (Write101x) vs Academic Writing Made Easy

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

edX (The University of Queensland) · Academic Writing

English Grammar and Style (Write101x)

4.4/ 5 · 26 opinions
21 positive4 neutral1 negative/ 26 total

edX · Academic Writing

Academic Writing Made Easy

4.3/ 5 · 28 opinions
23 positive3 neutral2 negative/ 28 total

Per-criterion

Content quality4.5 / 5

English Grammar and Style runs across eight weeks and is built around the building blocks of the language in a deliberate, ground-up sequence: principles and words, then sentences, then the parts of speech one at a time — verbs, nouns and pronouns, adjectives and determiners, adverbs, prepositions — before closing on paragraphs and punctuation. Rather than treating grammar as a list of rules to memorise, the course frames each element in terms of what it does for a writer's meaning and style, so the learner leaves not just knowing what a relative pronoun is but why a comma splice weakens a sentence and how to fix it. For a learner who "writes decently but doesn't really know why," this principled, element-by-element progression is the course's central strength. The most distinctive content decision is the inclusion of guest interviews with world-leading grammarians — David Crystal and Geoff Pullum of the University of Edinburgh — woven into the lectures. This lifts the course above a standard remedial-grammar refresher: learners hear practising linguists discuss why English grammar is the way it is, including its irregularities and idiosyncrasies, which makes the subject genuinely interesting rather than merely corrective. The material is reinforced with quizzes, discussion prompts, hands-on activities, and downloadable transcripts and slides for every lecture. The honest caveat is scope and level. This is a grammar-and-style course, not an academic-writing course in the thesis-or-essay sense — it sharpens sentences and punctuation but does not teach the macro-structure of a research paper. And its level sits in a useful but specific band: confident native speakers occasionally find early weeks revisit familiar ground, while some non-native learners find later weeks on punctuation and style demanding. It hits hardest for the large middle group who want to understand the rules they have been applying by instinct.

Instructor4.6 / 5

The course is created and convened by Associate Professor Roslyn Petelin, an award-winning writing educator who runs the well-regarded postgraduate program in Writing, Editing, and Publishing at The University of Queensland. Reviewers consistently single out her presentation as a highlight: she is articulate, enthusiastic about the subject, and conveys a genuine love of language that makes a topic many learners expect to be dry feel lively. For a long-running grammar MOOC, a personable, credible single presenter is a meaningful advantage over the team-produced or faceless format common to the genre. The instructor strength is amplified by the guest experts. Bringing in David Crystal and Geoff Pullum — two of the most recognised names in English linguistics — gives the course an authority and intellectual depth that few grammar courses can match, and signals that UQ took the subject seriously rather than producing a quick remedial refresher. Petelin's own published work and her editing background give her practical, not just academic, command of the material. The trade-off is the one inherent to any large MOOC: the presenter cannot give individual learners feedback on their writing. UQ News noted the teaching team's strong presence on the discussion boards ("an avalanche of posts"), and some learners credit responsive staff support with helping them finish, but at enrolments in the hundreds of thousands, personal correspondence on a learner's own sentences is not part of the model. The instruction is excellent; the personalisation is, necessarily, limited.

Value for money4.7 / 5

The course is free to audit on edX, with the full eight weeks of video lectures, the David Crystal and Geoff Pullum interviews, quizzes, activities, and downloadable transcripts and slides available without payment. A verified certificate is available as an optional paid add-on (typically in the region of USD 50 for this course), which also unlocks the graded path. For a learner whose goal is to genuinely understand English grammar and style, the free audit tier delivers essentially the complete instructional experience at no cost. Measured against the alternatives, this is exceptional value. Private writing or editing tutoring runs many tens of dollars per hour, and even paid grammar references and apps charge subscriptions for less depth than eight weeks of structured, university-produced instruction with world-class guest experts. For a non-native English speaker in a region where formal English-writing support is expensive or unavailable, free access to a UQ-produced grammar course of this calibre is a substantial resource. The value caveat is the familiar one: the certificate is a certificate of completion, not academic credit, and audit access on edX is usually time-limited, so a learner who wants permanent access to the materials or a credential for a CV must pay. But because the value is overwhelmingly in the learning rather than the paper, the free tier is very hard to argue against.

Feedback quality3.3 / 5

Feedback in Write101x comes through three channels: auto-graded quizzes that test recall and application of each week's rules, peer-review and discussion activities where learners respond to each other's writing and to provocative prompts about grammar, and the teaching team's participation on the discussion boards. The quizzes are well-suited to the subject — grammar and punctuation lend themselves to objective right-and-wrong checking far better than essay-writing does — so a learner gets immediate, reliable signal on whether they have understood a rule. The weaker channel is feedback on a learner's own extended writing. As with every open-enrolment MOOC at this scale, the usefulness of the peer and discussion activities depends on how engaged co-enrolled learners are, and there is no mechanism for the teaching team to mark an individual's prose sentence by sentence. The course is honest that it teaches you the rules and gives you the tools to self-edit, rather than promising a tutor's eye on your specific writing. That said, the subject partly mitigates the limitation. Because grammar and punctuation have largely determinable answers, the quizzes plus the rules themselves give a self-directed learner a clear, objective checklist to apply to their own work — a more workable form of self-assessment than is possible in a course about argument or style alone. Learners who want detailed personal feedback on their writing should still pair the course with a writing group, tutor, or editor.

Real-world use4.4 / 5

The skills taught here transfer to almost any writing a learner does. Clean sentences, correct punctuation, and a conscious grasp of style are not niche academic competencies — they apply to emails, reports, applications, social media, essays, and professional documents alike. The course's element-by-element structure means a learner can immediately apply each week's lesson: after the punctuation week, the comma splices and misplaced apostrophes in their own drafts become visible and fixable. UQ's framing that "everyone is writing more than ever" in the social-media age is exactly why the course's content has broad, durable applicability. The breadth of the enrolled audience — students reported from ages 11 to over 80, across dozens of countries — is itself evidence of the material's general applicability: it is useful to schoolchildren, professionals, retirees, and non-native speakers alike. The conscious understanding of why a construction works, rather than rote correction, is what makes the learning durable: a learner internalises the principle and keeps applying it long after the course ends. The applicability ceiling is that grammar and style are necessary but not sufficient for higher-level academic or professional writing. The course perfects the sentence; it does not teach how to structure a thesis, a literature review, or a long argument. For those, it is an excellent foundation to pair with a structure-focused course rather than a complete solution on its own.

Content quality4.5 / 5

The course covers six core areas across eight weeks: rhetorical preferences and audience expectations, genre differentiation for scholarly texts, cohesion and logical flow, reader-friendly sentence construction, credibility and persuasive techniques, and punctuation. A final integration module ties all threads together. Reviewers consistently describe the progression as logical and the individual lessons as concise and clearly explained. Even experienced academic writers report finding something new in each video — one participant who had written academic papers for several years noted that each module still contained fresh insight. The use of real student writing samples to illustrate both correct and incorrect technique is highlighted as particularly useful. The main content limitation noted by learners is that very advanced writers may find the treatment of some topics slightly surface-level; one reviewer specifically wished for a continuation or advanced-level sequel.

Instructor4.6 / 5

The course is led by a large team of nine instructors from TU Munich, including Dr. Heidi Minning, Dr. Stephen Starck, Dr. Aparna Bhar, Jeremiah Hendren, Susan O'Byrne, Rose Jacobs, Ruth Shannon, Elizabeth Hamzi-Schmidt, and Tina Schrier. Learner feedback on instructor quality is uniformly positive: reviewers call the presenters "professional and sympathetic," note that lessons are "enjoyable to watch," and praise the instructors' ability to make complex concepts accessible. The rotation across multiple instructors keeps the content engaging as each new module begins. No reviewer in the analysed sample criticises any instructor directly; the most neutral feedback merely notes that the multi-presenter format takes brief adjustment at the start.

Value for money4.7 / 5

The free audit track provides full access to all video lessons, exercises, peer-review activities, and discussion forums — making it one of the most generous free offerings in the academic writing MOOC space. A verified certificate costs approximately €65 (or around USD 59 depending on region), which is competitive given the TU Munich brand and the comprehensive content. TUM alumni receive the certificate at no charge through institutional partnership programmes. The course features in Class Central's list of Best Free Online Courses of All Time, a signal of sustained learner approval across years of operation. For the target audience of students and early-career researchers, the free tier alone delivers substantial value.

Feedback quality3.4 / 5

Each week includes peer-review tasks alongside the video lessons and exercises, and the course provides a discussion forum with reported prompt Q&A responses. However, learner feedback on the depth of peer review is mixed: the review activities are described as useful for reinforcing concepts, but some learners note that peer feedback quality varies significantly depending on the engagement level of co-learners at any given time. There is no instructor-led marking of individual written submissions in the audit track. The verified certificate track adds a mid-term and final examination, but these are graded automatically rather than by human evaluators. For learners who want detailed, expert feedback on their actual writing, the course does not fully satisfy that need.

Real-world use4.4 / 5

Multiple learner reports confirm direct application of course content to real professional and academic contexts. One participant found the sections on genre, cohesion, nominalisations, active and passive voice, credibility, and formal writing "extremely helpful" while preparing a report for the World Bank. Another noted markedly improved confidence for upcoming university coursework. The course is deliberately designed not only for traditional academics but for anyone who writes professional texts — including executives, bloggers, and professionals returning to formal study. This broad applicability is borne out in the learner profiles reflected in available reviews. One testimonial underscores the course's reframing of writing as a learnable skill: "writing is not some magical gift only intelligent people can wield — it is a skill anyone can be good at."

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