Photography Masterclass: Your Complete Guide to Photography vs Fundamentals of Music Theory
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Udemy · Creative Arts
Photography Masterclass: Your Complete Guide to Photography
Coursera · Creative Arts
Fundamentals of Music Theory
Per-criterion
Sixty-six hours of video covering aperture, shutter speed, ISO, manual mode, composition, lighting, multiple genres (landscape, portrait, wildlife, product, aerial), Lightroom and Photoshop make this one of the most comprehensive single beginner photography resources on Udemy. One student described it as "good and straight to the point and covers a lot of basic aspects you might need in photography and photo editing." The ceiling is that depth can feel thin for anyone beyond beginner level — breadth is prioritised over depth in every topic.
Phil Ebiner, a Loyola Marymount film school graduate teaching online since 2012, is praised across Reddit discussions for explaining complex concepts clearly and without ego, and for being responsive to student questions. The three-instructor format adds variety but a minority finds transitions between Ebiner, Shimizu-Jones and Carnahan slightly inconsistent in pacing.
At the near-constant Udemy sale price of $10–$20 the course is almost universally praised as exceptional value. Reddit users consistently recommend it specifically at that price — "worth the $20 I paid." The bundle includes a 276-page guidebook, over $100 of Lightroom presets and a student community. At the $119–$199 list price, however, the value case collapses and one reviewer explicitly tied their complaint to having paid full rather than sale price.
The course includes weekly photo challenges, shooting assignments and an exclusive peer-critique community — practical elements that beginners appreciate for structured practice. The ceiling is that there is no synchronous or live feedback mechanism, the community critique is self-organised, and experienced learners note the assignments do not push into advanced territory.
A business-of-photography section covering branding, portfolios, freelancing and wedding photography makes this course more practically oriented than most beginner courses. Real-world demonstrations across outdoor and indoor scenarios are a highlight. The business section is considered surface-level by more experienced learners, and advanced post-production is not covered in depth.
Six modules take you from pitches, scales and modes through intervals, clefs, rhythm and form into two full weeks of functional harmony and a harmonic-analysis final. Revised in 2022. Reviewers consistently praise the clarity and the bite-sized video chunks. Capped because the taught material is thin relative to the difficulty of the quizzes in the later weeks.
Five University of Edinburgh academics — Dr Thomas Butler, Dr John Kitchen MBE, Dr Zack Moir and colleagues — deliver genuinely academic, well-paced lectures. The teaching is the most consistently praised element across the corpus. The variety of voices keeps it fresh, though it makes the level of assumed knowledge uneven from week to week.
Free to audit in full; a certificate is ~$49 (or ~£35) and is included in a Coursera Plus subscription with financial aid available. For a six-module university-grade music-theory course with an open-access companion e-book, the free-audit route is hard to beat on price.
Assessment is quiz- and exam-based rather than creative-project-based — weekly graded quizzes plus a harmonic-analysis final. Good for testing recall and analysis, but there is no composition portfolio or peer-reviewed creative artefact. The exams are the most divisive element, with several learners flagging notation and clef demands that exceed the taught content.
The notation, harmony and analysis skills transfer directly to reading scores, arranging, songwriting and further academic study — Edinburgh positions it as a foundation for musicology, composition and performance. Limit is that it is Western-notation theory, not ear training, production or instrument technique, so it is one pillar of musicianship rather than all of it.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.