YMN The Young Mathematicians' Network
Serving the Community of Young Mathematicians
Sections: Front Page   Career   Diaries   Editors   Work and Family Life   Grad Life   Job Search   Misc   Paths to Math   Research   Teaching   Undergrad Life   Events   Frequently Asked Questions   News
Display: Sort:
Student Evaluations - what's the research say? | 3 comments (3 topical, 0 hidden)
[new] Evaluations to Be Taken Seriously? (none / 0) (#3)
by Jonny77889 on Wed Feb 13, 2008 at 08:33:48 PM PDT

I wonder if student evaluations are to be taken seriously, especially those for required classes or classes full of students with very poor math skills. It seems to me that many of these classes are the kind of classes that rate the instructor poorly if he is the kind of teacher who does not give A's to everyone, the kind that actually makes them WORK and LEARN to get a good grade. I had many, many students complain just because they actually had to LEARN something to get a good grade. They were so used to math teachers who gave them A's without actually making them do anything that when they got into my class where they had to do something to earn good grades, they complained.

Finally, I had a lot of comments on my evaluations that were completely useless, and it was clear (to me though I wonder if it was to anyone else) that this student viewed the evaluation as a joke!

I think the majority (perhaps the vast majority) of students (at least in required math classes) are too incapable to rate teachers in general and certainly too incapable of rating their own teachers impartially. Why? First of all, they haven't been trained to do so; in other words, no one has taught them what to look for when judging a teacher's skill. Second, they automatically think if they're doing poorly, it's the teacher's fault. But many of these students in lower-level math classes fail because they lack the background skills and study habits to succeed, and many do not even try to learn. So many fail because it's their own fault or their previous teachers' fault for not teaching them and preparing them for college math or their advisors' fault for placing them in a math class where they cannot succeed because they lack the background knowledge the course requires. However, they want to blame the teacher instead of blaming themselves when it's their own fault or they blame the teacher anyway when it's someone else's fault (but either they know this and don't care anyway, or they don't realize the teacher is not to blame).

I had math classes where I didn't learn much, but I knew it wasn't the teacher's fault; it was my own, either because I couldn't keep up with the class or I lacked the background I needed. And I know it takes some maturity to recognize and admit it's your own fault and not the teacher's.

I'm not saying that no evaluations from these courses are serious, and I'm not saying that it's never the teacher's fault when students blame him. I'm just saying that such evaluations sometimes appear much worse than they really should appear and that many of them are unreliable.



Student Evaluations - what's the research say? | 3 comments (3 topical, 0 hidden)
Display: Sort:

Menu
create account
FAQ
Search
Recent Comments

Login
Make a new account
Username:
Password:

SourceForge Logo Powered by Scoop
All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective companies. Comments are owned by the Poster. The Rest

create account | faq | search