Learner Reviews & Feedback for Agile with Atlassian Jira by Atlassian
About the Course
Top reviews
NP
Mar 26, 2021
Really good course, very practical and useful. I had already worked with Jira as a project manager but I still learn a lot with this course . Strongly recommend especially for new project managers
FJ
Mar 5, 2023
The course was thorough and up to the mark. Labs provide a great hands on learning. Couple of more labs may have helped grasping easy creating or editing options of procedures. I enjoyed the course.
2051 - 2075 of 2,181 Reviews for Agile with Atlassian Jira
By Rakesh S
•Sep 4, 2023
good
By Arathi V
•Aug 7, 2023
good
By Gina P B L
•Mar 7, 2023
bien
By MD a M
•Dec 2, 2022
good
By Pratush R
•Aug 23, 2022
good
By Devambhotla S S R
•May 4, 2022
good
By Anusha K
•Apr 12, 2022
good
By Rahul S P
•Mar 15, 2022
Good
By Hrushabh B
•Feb 19, 2022
WELL
By Maniram
•Dec 16, 2021
good
By SPURTI S
•Oct 18, 2021
good
By José A
•Aug 22, 2021
Nice
By Avinash .
•Jun 22, 2021
Good
By Geetha D
•May 19, 2021
Good
By Devivenkata P S
•May 8, 2021
good
By Rahul k
•Apr 19, 2021
good
By Johna N
•Oct 31, 2020
good
By Trần T K
•Apr 24, 2020
good
By A P
•Oct 18, 2019
good
By Nagendra K
•Oct 12, 2022
y
By Jibin V
•Jul 26, 2022
NA
By Deleted A
•Aug 30, 2020
bb
By Len W
•Dec 5, 2018
o
k
By YENUGULA V
•Nov 6, 2020
g
By Lisa R
•Apr 16, 2021
The content of the course was comprehensive, but there are several things that could be improved upon: First, while most Coursera courses are scripted, they are usually presented in a conversational tone. This was a very dry read, and I found it difficult to focus due to the monotonous delivery. Second, often the definitions used the words they were defining. For example, "Project administrators are users who have been assigned the Administer Project permission." This happened a lot. It would have been more effective to just define the function of the defined terms. Last and most important, the practice projects would have been MUCH more effective by using an actual sample project. Instead, we were asked to title them "Project A" and "Item 1", etc. Using vague generic terms did not help to visualize how a real-world project, issue, story, epic, etc. would be organized.