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Teaching Portfolio Website ContentsSummary of Teaching Responsibilities Philosophy of Teaching Statement Rationale for Course Materials |
Documenting Your Teaching Effectiveness
OverviewOne component of your teaching portfolio should be on how you document your teaching effectiveness. For many of us, that will usually include the use of student evaluations. But this can also include feedback from peers, advisors, consultants, and other constituents. A significant component of this section is your own reflection about your effectiveness based on the use of data gathered from these various sources. Even more importantly, it is not just to show a potential employer how good your evaluations are, but to demonstrate how you used the feedback in your development as a teacher. Evidence from studentsYour students are the most obvious source of feedback on your instruction. Research has shown that students provide valuable information about your teaching if the questions are structured in a useful way. Michael Theall (2002) has written a concise, insightful article in which he debunks several of the myths about student evaluations. For Ohio State's policy on evaluation of instruction see the section in the Office of Academic Affairs Handbook entitled "Evaluation of Instruction." Typically, your portfolio will have a separate section devoted to discussing student feedback. There are three main elements of this section: numeric (quantitative) evaluations, discursive (qualitative) evaluations, and reflection about and interpretation of the evaluations themselves. Below, various types of student feedback options at Ohio State are discussed. Types of student feedbackThere are many ways to assess your teaching, and using an end-of-term survey is the most popular (and mandatory for most instructors at Ohio State). These provide instructors with valuable information to help shape the course and teaching strategies for future course offerings. But how can an instructor collect data that could potentially help enhance the course for the current students? Here are a few tools for getting both end-of-term and mid-term student feedback. End-of-term feedback Student evaluation of instruction
(numerical/quantitative ratings) Discursive student evaluations (qualitative) Mid-term feedbackMid-quarter evaluations can be conducted at any time (and several times) during the quarter. The advantage to collecting mid-quarter feedback is that you can act on it immediately, by the next class. CATs (Classroom Assessment Techniques) Schreyer
Institute for Teaching Excellence at Penn State University FYI (Feedback on Your Instruction) SGID (Small Group Instructional Diagnosis) Evidence from non-studentsOther teaching professionals, such as your peers, professors or university teaching consultants can also provide you with evaluations of your teaching. If you are thinking about getting documentation on your teaching for summative and/or formative purposes, you may want to consider which individuals are appropriate sources to give you written evaluations on your teaching: peers, outside consultants, faculty, an advisor, or others who know your work and the field. Here are some kinds of documents from others that could be included. Peers, advisors, and other faculty
Documentation from outside consultants
Summarizing your feedbackBe inclusive: Find an efficient way to document as many courses as possible, if appropriate (there is no need to go beyond 5 years in most cases). If the courses were for different student populations, (freshman vs. upperclassmen vs. adult learners), you might want to point this out and organize it accordingly. Be descriptive: Explain when and how these evaluations were collected. For example, if they are SEI results, spell out what SEI means, how it is used on your campus (mandatory vs. elective), etc. Include course names, quarters/years taught, number of students in class, number of students providing reponses to the survey, etc. Describe the scale (i.e. if the scale is 1-5, state whether 5 is “excellent” or "poor"). For qualitative data, explain when and how these evaluations were collected. If you asked your students to address specific topics, mention them. Graphic displays: You may decide to display SEI or other quantitative data graphically, which is useful if your evaluations have improved over a period of several quarters, for example, or if you are showing data for a few different classes. Be sure that the graph is easy to read and interpret. Be careful not to assemble graphs of numbers with no explanation. Somewhere on the graph, include number of students, dates the courses were taught, qualities that are being evaluated, etc. Include a figure legend that describes what the graph is showing, in case the reader does not have time to decipher the graph. A main feature of graphs is that they should not be too cluttered; clarity is key. Depending on your audience, you may choose to include all courses taught over a certain period of time (promotion and tenure purposes) or only a select number (applying for a faculty job) in order to showcase your "best" work or the courses you've actually designed. Either way, it will be important to describe which courses you've chosen to include and why. See an example of how someone has chosen to represent end-of-term evaluations in a table. Include student comments: If you have copies of written student feedback, it can be submitted as supporting data. However, as discussed for graphic displays above, it is inadequate to provide a long list of student comments without any kind of explanation. One way to summarize student comments is by category. Within each category, it is important to include representative student comments; there is no need to include a large number of comments that target the same issue. You may also want to include a few comments that address a teaching weakness. It is important, however, to provide some commentary on what you have done or plan to do with this kind of feedback. It is also important to let your reader know that these are "representative" comments and not every one you've ever received. Choose the number of comments to include carefully. Too many can be overwhelming; too little can look sparse. See an example of how someone has chosen to summarize mid-term student feedback. See another example of how someone has summarized end-of-term discursive feedback by organizing representative comments around common themes or categories. Be reflective: Even if you follow the tips listed above, they are inadequate without a paragraph that describes your interpretation of the evaluations and how you have used the feedback to change or enhance your instruction or course design. The following questions are designed to help you think about how student feedback has influenced you as a teacher.
See an example of how someone summarized student feedback in a narrative format and included reflective comments about the feedback throughout. Once you choose how you will summarize discursive and quantitative feedback, you will want to consider how you will lay this out in one document for your portfolio. There is no right or wrong way to do this. Here is an example of how one TA summarized her data: Robert
M. Anthony, Sociology Pulling it all togetherYou will need to make some decisions on how you will organize this section. If this is for a formative portfolio, how much information you include depends on what you want to know and think about. If this is for a summative portfolio submitted for a job application, how much you choose to say and how much detailed data you include will depend on how much information you think an institution to which you are applying wants to know. You can either include this information in your portfolio as a separate section, include relevant pieces of this document in other sections of your portfolio, or do both. For example, if the rationale for changing how you taught a course mid-quarter, or from one quarter to the next, was a result of student feedback, you will want to include a few sentences describing the feedback in the teaching responsibilities section of the portfolio. You might also mention it as part of your teaching philosophy statement if your philosophy of teaching was influenced by student evaluations. It might even be possible to quote a student comment in your cover letter. Mentioning your response to student and non-student feedback in various locations within your portfolio serves to connect the different documents that make up your portfolio. ReferencesAngelo, T. A. & Cross, K. P. (1993). Classroom Assessment Techniques: A Handbook for College Teachers. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. Theall, M. (2002, Fall). Student Ratings: Myths vs. Research. Focus on Faculty, 10(3), 2-3. Brigham Young University Faculty Center. |
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questions or problems Updated: 2/11/2005 |