English Grammar and Style (Write101x) vs Academic English: How to Write a Thesis
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)
edX (The University of Queensland) · Academic Writing
Academic English: How to Write a Thesis
Per-criterion
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.
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.
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 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.
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.
Academic English: How to Write a Thesis is structured across five modules that map directly onto the macro-structure of a research thesis, dissertation, or journal article. The course opens with what it means to be an academic writer and how academic language and conventions differ from general writing, then walks section by section through the introduction and literature review, the methodology and results, and finally the discussion and conclusion. This section-by-section sequencing is the course's defining strength: rather than treating academic writing as an abstract skill, it anchors every module to a concrete, recognisable part of the document a research student actually has to produce. The most distinctive content decision is the use of real published exemplars drawn from across the disciplinary spectrum — arts and humanities, social sciences, and the physical and life sciences. Each written section is examined for its characteristic structures and language features, with commentary from disciplinary experts on how conventions shift between fields. For learners who have read research papers without ever consciously analysing how they are built, this exemplar-driven approach is genuinely illuminating: it makes the implicit rules of the genre explicit. The course also addresses the difference between qualitative and quantitative reporting, citation conventions, and how to define a research domain and identify a gap. The honest caveat is scope. At roughly 10 weeks of 1 to 3 hours per week, this is an orientation to thesis structure rather than a substitute for discipline-specific supervision. It teaches the architecture and language of each section thoroughly, but it cannot teach the subject-matter judgement that a thesis in a specific field requires. Learners expecting the course to coach them through their own particular thesis will find it teaches the form expertly while leaving the content to them and their supervisor.
The course is produced by The University of Queensland's academic English teaching staff through UQx, the university's edX programme, and is credited to a team of academic writing experts rather than a single named headline instructor. UQ is one of Australia's leading research-intensive universities (a member of the Group of Eight) and has a long, well-regarded track record in online English-language and writing instruction on edX — its earlier "English Grammar and Style" (Write101x) and "Academic English: How to Write an Essay" (ACE101x) courses are among the most enrolled English courses on the platform. This institutional depth in language pedagogy is evident in the course's design. A notable strength of the team-taught, exemplar-based model is the inclusion of commentary from disciplinary experts across the arts and humanities, social sciences, and physical and life sciences. Rather than a single instructor generalising about "academic writing," learners hear from specialists about how conventions actually differ between fields — which is closer to the reality a thesis writer faces than a one-size-fits- all treatment would be. The trade-off of the production-team model is the absence of a single, charismatic instructor voice that some learners value for motivation and continuity. Reviewers of UQ's edX courses generally describe the presentation as clear, professional, and well-produced rather than personable in the way a single-instructor MOOC can be. As an asynchronous course, there is also no mechanism for learners to receive feedback directly from the teaching team on their own thesis drafts — guidance comes through the structured content and peer activities, not personal correspondence with the instructors.
The course is free to audit on edX, with all five modules of video lectures, exemplar analyses, and learning materials accessible without payment. A verified certificate is available as an optional add-on at approximately USD 129, which also unlocks graded components. For learners whose goal is to understand thesis structure and improve their academic writing, the free audit tier delivers essentially the full instructional value of the course at no cost. Measured against the alternatives, this is strong value. University writing centres, private academic editors, and thesis-writing coaches typically charge substantially more for comparable structured guidance, and they rarely offer the breadth of cross-disciplinary published exemplars that this course assembles in one place. For a research student in a region where English-medium academic writing support is expensive or unavailable, free access to UQ-produced thesis instruction is a meaningful resource. The main value caveat concerns the certificate specifically. At approximately USD 129, the verified certificate is priced in line with other standalone edX courses, but it is a certificate of completion rather than a credit-bearing qualification — it will not count toward a degree. For most learners that is irrelevant, because the value is in the learning rather than the credential; but anyone weighing the USD 129 purely as a CV line should understand what it does and does not signal before paying. For the underlying instruction, the free tier is hard to argue against.
Feedback in How to Write a Thesis comes through two channels: structured self-assessment activities built into the modules, and peer activities in which learners share and respond to each other's work. The course is explicitly designed with "an array of individual and peer activities," which means that the most useful feedback on a learner's own writing depends on the engagement of co-enrolled peers — a known and unavoidable limitation of open-enrolment courses at this scale. The self-assessment activities are well-constructed because they are anchored to the exemplars: learners are asked to identify the structural and language features of a section in a published paper, then apply the same lens to their own draft. This is an effective form of indirect feedback — it gives learners a checklist of what a strong section contains and lets them calibrate their own work against it. For motivated, self-directed learners, this scaffolding can substitute reasonably well for external feedback. The genuine constraint is the absence of expert feedback on individual theses. A thesis is a long, high-stakes, discipline-specific document, and the learners who most need this course — early-stage research students writing their first major piece — are also the ones least equipped to self-diagnose their weaknesses. The course is honest about its model: it is a structured guide, not a supervision substitute. Learners should pair it with their actual supervisor, a university writing centre, or a peer group for feedback on their specific text.
Real-world applicability is where this course is strongest. Unlike general academic-writing courses that teach essay structure in the abstract, How to Write a Thesis is organised entirely around the document its target learners must actually produce. Every module corresponds to a section a research student has to write — introduction, literature review, methodology, results, discussion, conclusion — so the skills transfer directly and immediately to the learner's own thesis, dissertation, or journal article. The cross-disciplinary exemplars are a major applicability strength. By showing how the same structural function (for example, establishing a research gap, or reporting results) is realised differently in the humanities, social sciences, and physical and life sciences, the course equips learners to recognise and adopt the conventions of their own field rather than applying a single generic template. A learner can take the analytical method taught here and apply it to exemplar papers in their specific sub-discipline — which is exactly the skill that makes the course durable beyond its runtime. The applicability ceiling is the same as the content ceiling: the course teaches the form of a thesis with precision but cannot supply the subject-matter substance. It is most useful for research students at the planning-and-drafting stage who understand their content but struggle with how to structure and express it academically. For learners who need sentence-level English grammar support before tackling thesis structure, UQ's companion grammar course is the better starting point.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.