Introduction to Prompt Engineering for Generative AI vs Deep Learning 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.
LinkedIn Learning · AI & ML Courses
Introduction to Prompt Engineering for Generative AI
DeepLearning.AI (Coursera) · AI & ML Courses
Deep Learning Specialization
Per-criterion
Introduction to Prompt Engineering for Generative AI
The course covers the foundational prompt engineering concepts a non-technical professional needs to use generative AI tools productively: how large language models work at a conceptual level, why prompt structure affects output quality, and how to apply specific techniques (role assignment, constraint specification, context framing, and iteration) across text generation tasks. It also introduces image generation prompting with DALL-E. The breadth is appropriate for a 63-minute course and the selection of concepts is well-calibrated for a business professional audience. The limitation is that advanced topics — chain-of-thought prompting, few-shot examples, structured output formatting, system prompt design — are mentioned but not taught in depth.
Ronnie Sheer is a Senior AI Engineer who teaches prompt engineering with the practical intuition of a practitioner rather than the theoretical framing of an academic. Reviewers consistently describe his explanations of why certain prompt structures work better than others as the most valuable part of the course — particularly the demonstration that small, specific changes to phrasing produce substantially better outputs than vague or general requests. His instruction style is concise and professional, matching the LinkedIn Learning audience's expectations.
The course is available free on LinkedIn Learning during trial periods and included within a LinkedIn Learning subscription (~$40/month, with frequent employer and library partnerships providing free access). For a 63-minute investment that immediately improves how a professional interacts with AI tools they are already using daily, the value-to-time ratio is excellent. The course was among the top ten most-viewed LinkedIn Learning AI courses of 2024–2025, with over 396,000 learners, validating its perceived value at scale.
The most consistently cited strength of the course is that it is immediately applicable to daily professional AI usage. Learners who use ChatGPT, Copilot, or Claude for work — email drafting, research synthesis, data analysis, content generation — report directly applying the prompt structure techniques in the same session they watch the course. The multi-platform coverage (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, Copilot, DALL-E) means the techniques transfer across the tools learners are most likely to encounter in a professional environment.
Deep Learning Specialization
Praised for strong intuition-building and the NumPy-first implementation in Course 1, but reviewers note the curriculum predates Transformers and LLMs and the final Sequence Models course lands less cleanly than the earlier ones.
Andrew Ng's pedagogy gets near-universal praise across HN and blogs over an eight-year window. Multiple reviewers describe him as the clearest ML instructor they have ever had; critical comments are essentially absent.
Strong content per dollar at the $49/month Coursera price for learners who finish in 2-3 months, but the subscription model penalises slow learners and the paywall around graded assignments draws consistent complaints.
Browser-hosted Jupyter notebooks with auto-grading remove install friction, and the DeepLearning.AI community forum is active. Several reviewers flag homework infrastructure as occasionally flaky.
Builds a credible foundation and the bias/variance and error-analysis material in Course 3 transfers directly to real work. Reviewers consistently note you still need projects, Kaggle or a portfolio before the certificate matters to employers.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.