The Chronicle has an article out today, “Can the Student Course Evaluation Be Redeemed?”, that rightly points out how student course evaluations are often counter-productive to improving teaching and learning. The article refers to a Stanford professor’s call for an instructor completed “inventory of the research-based teaching practices they use”, but most of the article centers on revised course evaluation tool from a Kansas State University spin-off (the IDEA Center). One of the key problems described is that “administrators often take their results as numerical gospel” as well as faculty misapplying the results.
However they’re used, a lot of course evaluations simply aren’t very good, [IDEA president] Mr. Ryalls says.
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https://mindwires.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/mindwireslrg-whitepad.png00Phil Hillhttps://mindwires.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/mindwireslrg-whitepad.pngPhil Hill2015-11-30 00:00:002020-11-20 13:37:32Student Course Evaluations and Impact on Active Learning