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The Joy of Teaching Evals Teaching

By Anonymous Hero
from the mean people suck department
Posted Wed Jan 14, 2004 at 04:50:05 PM PDT
Its getting to be that time of year again. Spring classes are about to start and you get a fresh new crop of students. Of course this is also the time when you get back teaching evaluations from the students you had last semester. And it seems no matter how much effort you put into your teaching there are always students who are not happy with how things went (and even if it was lack of work on their part, its always your teaching evals take the rap).

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"Show more examples" say some students. "Don't waste so much class time with examples" say others. How does one make sense of student evaluations?

Of course, I don't really know if I have any answers to the question. In fact I'm actually posting this story more as a way of seeking advice than anything else.

This past semester I taught a large calculus course of upwards of 250 students. This was the second time I have taught this particular course and I made (what I thought) were many "improvements" to how I had organized and ran the course. Overall, prior to getting and reading through the student evaluations, I had felt that the course had gone much better this second time around. However, at least the numerical "evidence" from my teaching evaluations tells another story. In every catagory my evaluations managed to drop! :(

So, I'd like to hear from others people out there (perhaps more experienced professors and/or TAs). How have you folks faired when it comes to student evaluation of your teaching and how can you make some constructive use of these comments and avoid sinking into a black pit of despair when your impressions of a class diverge greatly from student feedback?

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The Joy of Teaching Evals | 2 comments (2 topical, 0 hidden)
[new] Improving your evals (none / 0) (#1)
by dkung on Thu Jan 15, 2004 at 12:10:04 PM PDT

When I think about evaluations, the cynical side of me says of course there are ways to improve evals. Be male, young, white, and energetic.

Rather than leaving it at that, I thought I'd do a little digging and see what educational esearchers have to say about this subject. After a bit of web-searching, here's an overview:

Your evals will improve if you are (in no particular order):

1. enthusiastic - (click here )

2. male (esp. in a male-dominated subject like mathematics - here for a bibliography)

3. teaching a large course and are perceived as "liberal, neurotic and extroverted"

4. teaching a small discussion-oriented class and are perceived as "gregarious, adaptable and supportive" (these last two are pulled from a nice overview of the research on teaching evaluations called "Instructor Evaluations and the Politics of the Classroom" )

I was somewhat surprised to not find anything on age or race - then again, I didn't spend more than half an hour looking. (It might also be an indication of the number of minority professors out there.)

My conclusions: Don't despair. If you can use evaluations (formal or otherwise) as a formative tool - to help you understand the effects of your teaching - that's great. Just pray that they aren't being used as a normative tool - to measure your "effectiveness" as a teacher, evaluations fail miserably.

The idea that we can easily measure something as complex and multi-faceted as teaching effectiveness is a very dangerous one. Unfortunately, it's an idea shared by many college administrators and by our current President.





[new] Manipulating evals (none / 0) (#2)
by Anonymous Hero on Mon Jan 19, 2004 at 09:35:17 AM PDT

I discovered this technique quite by accident, but boy did my official evals jump after this.

I used to (out of academics, making real money now) do my own informal evaluation about 4-6 weeks ahead of the official one. I'd ask just four questions:

1) What are things you like about the class?

2) What is one thing you'd like to see the instructor do to improve the class?

3) what is one thing you'd say to your fellow students that would improve the class?

4) what is one thing you could do to improve the class?

I would be honest and tell the students that there is naturally a chance I'd recognize handwriting, so anonymity can't be guaranteed.

Interestingly, I found that 2) often canceled itself out. For instance, there was usually a balance between students who thought the pace was too fast and those who thought it too slow. It was almost dead on 50-50 split. 3) allowed me to reinforce things I'd been doing in class discipline all along -- typically the complaint was about class noise/side conversations.

But I'd always find something to "improve" upon, even if I had to pick something superficial.

Initially, I was honestly trying to improve the class atmosphere, but later on I found it a great and memorable gesture to the class that I actually cared about my performance and their experience in the class. I think it was the gesture more than anything that created a positive mindset going into the formal evals.



The Joy of Teaching Evals | 2 comments (2 topical, 0 hidden)
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