90 likes | 180 Views
Proposal for an A&S Course Evaluation Web Site. Faculty Meeting February 21, 2006. Advantages of the Proposed A&S Web Site. Postings would occur with greater accuracy, reliability and promptness compared to the current SGA web site. A VUnet ID will be required for access.
E N D
Proposal for an A&S Course Evaluation Web Site Faculty Meeting February 21, 2006
Advantages of the ProposedA&S Web Site • Postings would occur with greater accuracy, reliability and promptness compared to the current SGA web site. • A VUnet ID will be required for access. • Improved management of the site with appropriate restrictions governing access. • A disclaimer will be added relating to the importance of looking at several sources of information in making a decision about a given course.
Formatting • Results for Questions 1-9 and 15 will be included for each course, except as noted below. • Data will be presented as histograms rather than means and SDs. • The number of students enrolled and the number responding will be displayed. • Access will be permitted to one course at the time. • Data mining will be difficult. • Goal of making 3 academic years of data available to students.
Exceptions • Written comments by students will not be included. • A course will not be included if there is less than a 50% response or fewer than five students responding. • A junior faculty member may petition the Dean through his or her department chair to withhold course evaluation data. • Any faculty member may also petition the Dean through his or her department chair for compelling reasons (e.g. family emergency, illness, newly designed course, taking over a course in mid-semester, etc.)
Other Vanderbilt Colleges have found our Online Course Evaluation System and our proposed Course Evaluation Web Site useful and are planning on or considering adopting them. • Peabody College • School of Engineering • Blair School of Music • Owen School of Management • Vanderbilt Law School
Peer Comparisons Yes, publicly accessible: Rice University University of Chicago Yes, password-protected: Columbia University (some departments) Georgetown University Johns Hopkins University Northwestern University Washington University in St. Louis Yale University (50% of questions are accessible to students)
Peer Comparisons Student managed and password-protected: Brown University Harvard University Princeton University Stanford University University of Pennsylvania University of Virginia Vanderbilt University
Peer Comparisons No Student Access to Course Evaluations: Cornell University Dartmouth University Duke University* Emory University Notre Dame* University of California-Berkeley* UCLA University of Michigan * online web site under discussion
Features of the Web Site Test web site