Bloom's Sixth
A national conversation on evaluating teaching starts to take shape
A recent meeting at the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine achieved little consensus on how best to evaluate teaching, but it certainly showed a widespread desire for a fairer system that better reflects the many components of excellent teaching.
The National Academies co-sponsored the meeting earlier this month in Washington with the Association of American Universities and …
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by Doug Ward
Negotiating the challenges of a new approach to evaluating teaching
CHARLOTTE, N.C. – Faculty members seem ready for a more substantive approach to evaluating teaching, but …
It’s that “but” that about 30 faculty members from four research universities focused on at a mini-conference here this week. All are part of a project called TEval, which is working to develop a richer model of teaching evaluation by helping departments change their teaching culture. The project, funded by a $2.8 million National Science Foundation grant,…
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by Doug Ward
The paradox of evidence-based teaching
The spread of evidence-based teaching practices highlights a growing paradox: Even as instructors work to evaluate student learning in creative, multidimensional ways, they themselves are generally judged only through student evaluations.
Students should have a voice. As Stephen Benton and William Cashin write in a broad review of research, student evaluations can help faculty members improve their courses and help administrators spot potential problems in the…
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by Doug Ward