My history: I have been a long-time supported of Logos and now Faithlife products and the Bible study software since the beginning of having a big stack of floppy diskettes. I own a greater than collectors collection, over the years of adding resources.
Kudo: One of the biggest ideas introduced in recent times (at least to me) was the courses too. There has been some ups and downs in moving from beta to production and to a full-feature. I love that it tracks my progress in the courses I take. Especially important since I have more than a few courses and tracks.
Description: However, there is a problem in the tool. When going through a course, I find that I have all the "Suggested Reading", and most of the "see also's". and many times, I will actually purchase more of the see also's, if I feel that they are significant enough in my class-studies. the point, though is that there are some few that I do not own.
BUG: and so when I "complete" a course, there are some tiny blanks in the circle of completion for that course. So, of course the course stays in the "Started" section, and doesn't move to the "Completed" section. This is a bug, in the tool, in my opinion and should be addressed.
Suggestion 1: In the courses tool, upper right corner of the course, there is a drop down menu that allows us to import reading or delete the plan. I suggest a third option to be able to mark a course as completed, so that it moves to the completed section.
Suggestion 2: L7 is "smart" enough to track the progress of the course, and to obviously to know if I own a referenced resource or not - it should then also "know" that when the course is completed, that it is completed.
Conclusion: This is very frustrating, given the advancements in technology and software development. perhaps aesthetics to some, but when I have to scroll through the Started section of completed courses, it is more than an inconvenience of it showing me incorrect status of that course. I hope the development team in Faithlife take this issue seriously. I have reported it several times, though as I recall in reference with other bugs in various courses themselves.