170 likes | 267 Views
Developing Yourself, Supporting Learners: Collecting and Providing Student Feedback. TA conference Thursday, September 10, 2009. Questions, Questions.
E N D
Developing Yourself, Supporting Learners: Collecting and Providing Student Feedback TA conference Thursday, September 10, 2009
Questions, Questions • On the yellow cue card, jot down a question you have about collecting and responding to feedback that you would like answered during this session (or if not all can be answered, after the session via email).
Agenda • My first feedback experience! • GETFAST – what do you need to know • Getting started – key questions • Considerations • Types of Feedback Tools • Resources and References
APGAR Score: My First Test How did I do?! Jeanette McDonald, 2 months
APGAR Score Source: http://www.childbirth.org/articles/apgar.html
Purpose of APGAR Score Encompasses Sound Assessment • establishes a benchmark • identifies strengths and weaknesses • calls for action • measures the impact of action Source: Marini & Violato, 2000
GETFAST • Quick and easy to set-up • Available online 24/7 • Question bank of 300+ questions in across 25+ categories • Ask up to 20 questions at a time • http://getfast.ca (Canadian)
Getting Started: Questions to Ask • What do you want to assess? • What kind of feedback do you want to collect? • How do you intend to use the feedback? • How often do you want to collect feedback? • From whom do you want feedback? • Feedback goals ? (meet WIN & WIL)
What can students report on? • their learning and learning needs • low inference teaching behaviours (i.e., specific observable teaching behaviours) • their classroom experience
TBI findings (Murray, 1983/1997) • what constitutes effective teaching – fairy consistent across discipline • low, average and high rated instructors teach differently (clarity, enthusiasm, rapport, interaction) • enthusiasm/expressiveness can facilitate student attentiveness and information processing (from receiving to recall, especially with clear explanations)
Limitations of Student Feedback • HALO Effect - rater first impression colours ranking (positively or negatively) • Error of Central Tendency- rater avoidance of ranking extremes (e.g., very high/very low); limited variance
Research Insights • more challenging courses are rated better than easy courses – BUT! • teacher personality can positively impact ratings – BUT!
Suggestions • collect feedback early and often • choose a multi-pronged approach • supplement end-of-term rating forms
Select Tools • START-STOP-CONTINUE • One Minute Paper • Student Liaisons (committee/individual) • Comment Box • Dear Professor Letter • Basketball Questions • Classroom/Tutorial/Lab Observation • M/C Question Generation • Teaching Journal
Educational Development Serviceswww.wlu.ca/edev > services • consultation on developing an evaluation plan • design assistance on feedback tools • implementation of the teaching behaviours inventory (in whole or in part) • implementation of the SGID (small group instructional diagnosis) • classroom observation and report • videotaping of classroom and viewing guidelines
References • ---- Overview of Student Ratings: Values and Limitations, The IDEA Center. Accessed: October 4, 2006. http://www.idea.ksu.edu/StudentRatings/value-limitations.html • Chickering, A. & Gamson, Z. (1987). Seven principles for good practice in undergraduate education. American Association of Higher Education Bulletin, 4 (7), 3-7. • Davis, B. (1993). Tools for Teaching. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. • Farquharson, A. (1995). Teaching in Practice: How Professionals Can Work Effectively with Clients, Patients and Colleagues. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass. • Erdle, S. & Murray, H. (1986). Interfaculty differences in classroom teaching behaviours and their relationship to student instructional ratings. Research in Higher Education, 24, 115-127. • McKeachie, W. (2002). Teaching Tips: strategies, research, and theory for college and university teachers. (11th edition). Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Co. • Murray, H. (1983a). Low-inference classroom teaching behaviours and student ratings of college teaching effectiveness. Journal of Educational Psychology, 75, 138-149. • Murray, H. (1983b). Low-inference teaching behaviours related to college teaching effectiveness. In J. G. Donald (ed.) Proceedings of the Conference on the Evaluation and Improvement of University Teaching: The Canadian Experience. Montreal: Centre for Teaching and Learning Services, McGill University. • Murray, H. (1997). Effective teaching behaviours in the college classroom. In Effective Teaching in Higher Education. New York: Agathon Press.
Resources • FAST – Free Assessment Summary Tool (online survey tool; easy to use; create your own or use database questions; data can be aggregated; and more) http://getfast.ca • Student Ratings of Teaching: The Research Revisitedhttp://www.idea.ksu.edu/resources/index.html • Evaluating [Y]our Teaching: An Introductory Guidehttp://cubic.wlu.ca/documents/15432/Evaluation_of_Teaching.pdf(short module: developing an evaluation plan; feedback tools; guidelines and more) • Classroom Assessment Techniques http://www.siue.edu/~deder/assess/catmain.html(quick and easy assessment tools for collecting data on student learning) • Fast Feedback (chapter from Tools for Teaching – ideas and considerations)http://teaching.berkeley.edu/bgd/feedback.html • Tools for Reflecting on Your Teaching (feedback tools; data from students, peers, self) http://www.adm.uwaterloo.ca/infotrac/tips/toolsforreflectingonteaching.pdf • The Teaching Professor newsletterhttp://www.magnapubs.com/subscribe/magnapubs_tp.html • Teaching Goals Inventory (60-item inventory for feedback on your teaching)http://cubic.wlu.ca/page.php?grp_id=333&p=3335