About ZasysdalimLearn
An independent resource for anyone navigating the growing world of online education, with a particular focus on learners based in Spain.
What This Site Is
ZasysdalimLearn is an editorially independent platform that reviews and compares online learning services. We do not accept payment for placement or editorial coverage, and we do not use affiliate links that influence our recommendations.
The site exists because choosing an online course is more complicated than it appears. The market is large, pricing is opaque and the value of certificates varies enormously depending on industry and employer. We try to provide the kind of analysis that helps a real person make a real decision.
Our coverage focuses on the largest and most commonly used platforms — Coursera, Udemy, edX, Khan Academy and Udacity — along with periodic articles on study methods, certificate recognition and distance education policy in Spain.
Our Editorial Approach
We test platforms ourselves before writing about them. Courses are enrolled in and completed, not just described from a marketing page. Where we cannot test something directly, we draw on verified user reports, academic research on online learning outcomes, and publicly available platform data.
When we reach a conclusion that is unflattering to a platform, we publish it anyway. A review that only highlights advantages is not a review — it is advertising. We flag limitations as clearly as strengths, and we update our content when platforms make significant changes.
If you notice an error, an outdated fact or a platform feature we have missed, we genuinely want to know. Reach us at our contact page.
Why Spain Specifically?
Spain has a complex relationship with distance education. UNED, the national distance university, was founded in 1972 and now serves over 200,000 students, making it one of the largest universities in Europe by enrolment. Spanish learners therefore already have a strong context for remote study.
At the same time, international e-learning platforms are growing rapidly in Spain, particularly among working professionals in Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia and Seville. The question of how Coursera or Udemy certificates are perceived by Spanish employers — and how they compare to UNED credentials — is one we try to answer with specific rather than generic advice.
We also pay attention to practical matters like Spanish-language course availability, local payment options and how EU consumer protection rules apply to course refund policies on international platforms.
Quick Facts
About this site at a glance.