Duolingo English Test: Write About The Topic vs Dominate GMAT Verbal - Comprehensive GMAT Verbal Prep Course
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Luke Jones (Udemy) · Test Prep
Duolingo English Test: Write About The Topic
Brett Ethridge / Dominate Test Prep (Udemy) · Test Prep
Dominate GMAT Verbal - Comprehensive GMAT Verbal Prep Course
Per-criterion
Duolingo English Test: Write About The Topic
The course is praised for clear, structured explanations of the Write About the Topic task type — covering what the prompt expects, how the scoring rubric works, timing strategies, and common mistakes. Reviewers from the DET preparation community consistently describe the instruction as practical and actionable rather than generic. However, the content is scoped to a single question type in a test that has multiple distinct task formats, and it was last updated in February 2021. The 2024 Duolingo English Test format update introduced Interactive Writing and revised Fill in the Blanks mechanics; those changes are not reflected in this course. For learners focused purely on written production within the pre-2024 DET format, the content quality is high. For a learner preparing holistically for the current test, it covers only one slice of what they need.
Luke Jones carries a verified 4.6/5 instructor rating on Udemy across 22,763 students and 4,613 total ratings spanning his three courses. Learners across multiple sources describe his instructional style as clear, methodical, and easy to follow — he explains the rationale behind every strategy rather than just listing tips. His DET preparation community has helped hundreds of learners, and score-improvement stories tied to his advice (120 overall on a first attempt, scores of 130 and 140 after following his guidance) appear across multiple independent blogs. The instructor is the strongest single asset of this course, and the consistently high aggregate rating across a large student base is a reliable signal of teaching quality.
At Udemy's standard sale pricing (typically $10-15), a 2.5-hour course focused on one DET task type is a reasonable supplementary purchase for a learner who already has a broader study plan. The honest concern is that the course is narrow in scope, has not been updated since 2021, and does not cover the full DET. Learners expecting a complete preparation package at this price are likely to feel shortchanged. As a targeted supplement — bought specifically to sharpen performance on written production tasks — the value-for-money calculus is much more favourable. The 30-day Udemy money-back guarantee provides a safety net, but the gap between the course's actual scope and what many DET learners are searching for is a real value-perception risk.
The course includes model responses and worked examples for Write About the Topic prompts, which reviewers find helpful for understanding the standard to aim for. However, the practice-question bank is limited within a 2.5-hour course, and there are no adaptive mock-test environments, no full DET simulations, and no AI-generated feedback on learner responses. Dedicated DET practice platforms such as DET Ready (detready.com) offer 750,000+ users and AI-scored practice at a different scale. For raw practice volume, this course cannot compete with purpose-built DET drill tools; its value is in the strategy instruction that sits alongside any practice resource, not in providing that practice itself.
Score-improvement outcomes tied to Luke Jones's instruction are consistently positive across sources: learners report achieving 120, 130, and 140 overall DET scores after applying his strategies. One learner specifically attributes a production subscore improvement from 75 to 100 to targeted instruction. A learner passed on their first attempt with 120. These outcomes are credible given the instructor's large following and high aggregate satisfaction. The caveat is that the testimonials cannot be attributed exclusively to this Udemy course versus Jones's YouTube channel, website resources, or other course material — his DET content spans multiple formats. Learners seeking a guaranteed score lift should treat this course as one component of a multi-resource study plan rather than a standalone preparation solution.
Dominate GMAT Verbal - Comprehensive GMAT Verbal Prep Course
The course covers Sentence Correction (the "Big 6" grammar rules), Critical Reasoning, and Reading Comprehension across six-plus hours of instructional video. Learners consistently praise the clarity and structure — one student called the material "simple, straightforward and digestible" and credited Brett's "strategies and approaches for thinking quicker." However, the GMAT Focus Edition launched November 7, 2023 and completely removed Sentence Correction from the test, which was one-third of the classic verbal section. A course that still dedicates substantial runtime to a question type that no longer earns test-takers any points carries a content-currency problem that is structural, not stylistic.
Brett Ethridge is the course's strongest asset. A Duke University graduate and MA holder in International Finance, he has an instructor rating of 4.4 on Udemy across 3,199 reviews and is consistently praised for making complex verbal reasoning intuitive. Students describe him as having "fantastic teaching and amazing subject knowledge" and say the course "gave me tools to be confident with the test." Multiple students report 100–150 point score improvements they credit directly to his methods, and one debrief on GMAT Club singles him out by name: "The thing I enjoyed most about his style of teaching was that it was simple, straightforward and digestible."
At typical Udemy sale pricing (under $20 with lifetime access), Dominate GMAT Verbal is dramatically cheaper than the $147 standalone verbal plan on Brett's own DominateTestPrep.com or any full-platform competitor. Learners from the GMAT Club forum bought both this and a second Udemy verbal course for under $10 combined during a Black Friday sale, with one poster summarising the calculus as "Try it — it's virtually free." The honest offset is the GMAT Focus content problem: you are paying, however little, for a course that devotes significant time to Sentence Correction, a skill the current GMAT no longer tests.
The course includes worksheets for each of the six Sentence Correction grammar categories and reading comprehension and critical reasoning drills — adequate for reinforcement but not a high-volume question bank. Serious GMAT Club users consistently note that GMAC official practice tests are the only questions that truly mirror the adaptive exam, and neither this course nor any Udemy GMAT offering includes official GMAC material. For realistic GMAT Focus practice, learners must separately purchase the official GMAT prep software and question packs, making this course a teaching layer rather than a primary practice engine.
Where the course still lands well is on transferable reasoning skills. Critical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension — the two verbal question types retained in GMAT Focus — are taught rigorously, and multiple students report that Brett's structured approach to dissecting RC passages and CR arguments carried them on exam day. Student Georges Kazan (Quebec) specifically called out "Critical Reasoning tools were incredibly helpful," and another student described the experience as "like being handed a flashlight and a map" for an exam that had previously felt overwhelming. These skills also transfer directly to the verbal sections of the LSAT and GRE.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.