Lots of good advice here.
It does look like stick weld but you seem to have got the flux off so I can't be sure. The others are right about the lack of penetration.
Start practicing with a piece of clean flat plate, get rid of all paint. Choose a current setting for your rod (probably a range of current will be indicated on the box, or use Google)
Practice laying down flat beads, keep the arc very short, that is the tricky bit to master. If you go too fast you will have it standing on the plate in a ridge, if you go too slow it will penetrate into the plate, the pool will get wider and eventually it will burn through. Keep trying until you get a nice even bead level with the surface and when it is right the flux will come off easily when it cools. Until you master the speed you will get wide flat bits where you are about right and narrow peaky bits where you are too fast.
Keep going forward, if you get too fast it is tempting to go back over it, but don't you will trap slag in the weld,
When you can lay down a nice uniform bead then try welding two bits of flat plate together, that is more difficult but should come easily. Trying to do fillet welds between a flat plate and a vertical pipe will need more practice so don't be too disillusioned that you haven't got it quite right after one initial attempt, I have seen far worse than you have done.
The other big issue to overcome if you want to make really good welds is to see the parent metal flowing under the flux, you will only get this from practice or instruction form a good welder. In the early stages you will probably lay down respectable flux beads but when you chip the slag off the metal may not have flowed.
This last issue is the reason why MIG is so much easier to master as there is no flux to obscure your view,
I haven't looked on Youtube but I strongly suspect some skilled welders have put some good introductory material there. You can learn a great deal from watching a skilled welder, but to do it from a book is difficult to put it mildly.
Don't be afraid to smash your practice welds to bits, a good strong well penetrated weld that looks dreadful will function and can be made respectable with an angle grinder. A very attractive bit of cold lap with no penetration may seem good but will fail in a short time.
Flux