Watercolor for Beginners vs Creative Writing 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.
Skillshare · Creative Arts
Watercolor for Beginners
Coursera (Wesleyan University) · Creative Arts
Creative Writing Specialization
Per-criterion
Watercolor for Beginners
The class covers the genuinely essential foundations of watercolor: supply selection, how to fill a palette, the mechanics of wet-on-wet and wet-on-dry techniques, basic colour blending, and gradient washes. These are the exact building blocks a complete beginner needs before attempting any independent project. The three guided paintings — designed to be "fun-and-easy" — consolidate the techniques into memorable outcomes. Capped at 4.0 because the scope is deliberately narrow: this is a primer, not a comprehensive curriculum. Learners who complete it will be equipped to continue, not proficient by any independent standard.
Kolbie Blume's most consistent instructional asset is her credibility as a non- prodigy: until a few years before launching her teaching career, she was working a 9-to-5 desk job and believed her artistic ability peaked at stick figures. That background resonates powerfully with the learners this course targets — adults who assume creativity is innate rather than learnable. Her on-camera delivery is encouraging, methodical, and low-pressure, with no assumption of prior artistic intuition. Reviewers describe the pacing as comfortable and the explanations as unpretentious, which is exactly what a first-time watercolour learner needs.
The class is part of the Skillshare subscription catalogue ($165/year or ~$32/month), not a standalone purchase. For learners who plan to explore multiple Skillshare classes — across watercolour, illustration, photography, or design — the subscription offers strong per-class value. For those accessing Skillshare specifically for this one class, the maths depends on how many other classes they intend to take. A free trial is typically available, making zero-risk access to the class feasible. The value comparison versus private art instruction ($50–$100/hour) is unambiguously strong.
Three distinct guided painting projects give learners concrete, visible outcomes from a short class, which is both motivating and pedagogically sound for an introduction course. The projects are calibrated to be achievable by a genuine beginner within the class session, which is a deliberate pedagogical choice — low frustration, high completion — though it means the creative ceiling is set conservatively. Learners who have taken the class overwhelmingly share their project work in the Skillshare class community, which itself serves as a visible testament to what the class actually produces.
The three projects deliver concrete, shareable outcomes — paintings a beginner can realistically complete and feel proud of. The technique foundation (blending, gradients, water control) applies directly to future independent work and to Kolbie Blume's many follow-on Skillshare classes on more specific subjects (landscapes, galaxy paintings, botanical illustration). The limitation is scope: learners leave with a foundation, not a skillset. The gap between completing this class and painting independently with confidence is significant, and bridging it requires substantially more practice and follow-on instruction.
Creative Writing Specialization
Four courses covering plot, character, setting/description and style — each four weeks, each taught by a different Wesleyan author with a National Book Award or PEN nomination — plus a capstone project that produces a completed short story or narrative essay. The breadth is real and the Craft of Style course is singled out across the corpus as genuinely stretching. Capped because the material is pitched at beginners; those who have already read Bird by Bird, On Writing or The Elements of Fiction will find little new ground.
Brando Skyhorse (PEN/Hemingway Award), Amity Gaige (Folio Prize shortlist), Salvatore Scibona (National Book Award finalist, Guggenheim fellow) and Amy Bloom (two-time National Book Award nominee) are a genuinely extraordinary teaching roster for a free- to-audit MOOC. Scibona's Craft of Style and Skyhorse's Craft of Plot are the most consistently praised. Amy Bloom's Craft of Character is the one course multiple reviewers describe as abstract and under-delivering on its promise.
Video lectures are free to audit; all graded writing assignments and peer feedback — the core learning mechanism — require either a Coursera Plus subscription (~$59/month) or financial aid. The financial-aid route is available and has been reported to cover costs fully. For learners who pay full price for the specialization, the credential does not carry formal creative-writing weight, which reduces the return. Value is highest for learners on financial aid who complete all five courses.
Each of the four craft courses has a weekly writing assignment with strict word limits — the single most praised pedagogical feature. However, assessment is entirely peer-to-peer: your work is reviewed by three other learners, and you review three peers' work. Multiple reviewers report that most peer feedback amounts to one or two words ("good," "nice") with no substantive critique. The capstone produces a real completed piece, but without instructor-led critique it can arrive unpolished.
The forced weekly practice under word-limit constraints is the most transferable skill the specialization builds. Finishing a piece every week — even a short one — is harder than most writers manage outside a structured course, and the constraint-based approach to style and setting is the kind of discipline that carries into real writing practice. Limit is genre: the specialization covers short fiction, narrative essay and memoir only — not poetry, screenwriting or genre fiction — and offers no agent-query, submission or publishing guidance.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.