italki Spanish Tutoring vs Learn Spanish: Basic Spanish Vocabulary Specialization
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
italki · Languages
italki Spanish Tutoring
Coursera · Languages
Learn Spanish: Basic Spanish Vocabulary Specialization
Per-criterion
There is no italki Spanish curriculum — content quality is whatever the tutor brings. Professional teachers arrive with structured DELE prep, grammar plans and homework; community tutors lean on free-form conversation. Spanish-specific reviewers note the ceiling is high (subjunctive drilling, regional dialect work, exam prep) but the floor depends entirely on careful tutor selection and on the learner directing the sessions.
The strongest dimension. italki's Spanish pool is enormous — nearly 2,000 teachers spanning professional teachers with verified credentials and native community tutors across Spain and Latin America. Reviewers converge that a well-chosen Spanish tutor is the single highest-leverage thing they did. Verification screens out the worst, but the gap between an excellent teacher and a merely adequate one is real and unscreened.
Spanish is one of italki's best-supplied and cheapest languages. Latin American community tutors often run $4-9/hour; professional teachers $15-30. No subscription — pay per lesson. Reviewers repeatedly flag $10/hour for a native Colombian or Mexican tutor as one of the best deals in language learning, far below local classes or Spanish-only subscription competitors.
No streaks or gamification — you book and show up, or you don't. Learners who pre-commit to a weekly slot describe it as the most durable Spanish habit they built; without a schedule it lapses. The pre-paid credit system acts as a mild commitment device. The lack of a built-in progression path is the most-cited drag on long-term motivation for learners who want a course to follow.
Platform support handles payment, scheduling, cancellation and dispute resolution effectively. The 24-hour cancellation window is fair and refunds/rescheduling are reported as straightforward. The notebook and community-exchange features are active but secondary. The main support gripe is the no-refund-on-loaded-credit policy.
The clearest signal in the sample. Real conversation with a native Spanish speaker is the most direct path to fluency, and Spanish learners repeatedly describe italki as the step that moved them from app-bound recognition to actual conversation — exposing gaps (preterite at speed, ser/estar, subjunctive) that apps never surface. Multiple reviewers report passing B1/B2 CEFR exams after consistent use.
Five sequenced courses (~91 hours) build a working vocabulary of the 1,500 most-used Spanish words across meeting people, culture, sports, travel, home, careers and social events, capped by a project course. Praised for rigour and a real grammar-plus-application balance from a linguistics professor. Capped because reviewers repeatedly flag ordering problems — quizzes and grammar that lean on vocabulary not yet introduced.
Dr. Robert Blake of UC Davis is named by learners as precise, clear and concise — "an amazing professor" who explains every topic well. The academic, linguistics-led method is the headline draw. Marked down slightly because some reviewers wanted more on-camera teaching time and felt the lecture segments were too brief for the workload.
Individual courses can be audited free; the full specialization with graded quizzes, peer review and the certificate runs on Coursera's ~$49/month subscription (or Coursera Plus), and financial aid can cover it entirely. For a university-produced, certificate-bearing Spanish primer, the audit-plus-aid route is exceptional value and the most-cited reason learners chose it over paid apps.
The scheduled weekly routines and progressive structure keep motivated learners moving, and several describe learning "quickly". Marked down because the five-course, ~91-hour commitment is long, the interactive practice is thin, and learners who hit the out-of-order-content friction early are the ones most likely to drop.
As a MOOC, support is auto-graded quizzes plus peer-reviewed assignments and discussion forums — no live tutor and no pronunciation feedback. The most-cited concrete complaint is peer grading: some learners reported assignments marked by graders "who have no idea what they're doing", and beginners left to Google answers the course assumed it had taught.
A 1,500-word working vocabulary across everyday domains — greetings, culture, travel, home, work, social events — is exactly what a first trip or a conversational foundation needs, and the grammar grounding transfers well. Limit is speaking: there is no pronunciation correction or live conversation, so spoken fluency must be built elsewhere.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.