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Student Ratings of Instruction: Recognizing Effective Teaching
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Student Ratings of Instruction: Recognizing Effective Teaching Paperback - 2013 - 1st Edition

by Nira Hativa


From the publisher

Student evaluation of teaching (SET), or teacher evaluation by students in higher education, titled here student ratings of instruction (SRI), is a most frequently researched and discussed issues in American educational literature. This book is designed for faculty members of all types of higher education institutions and all academic domains who are frustrated, angered, or distrustful of their students' ratings, and would appreciate answers to their concerns. The book may also be of help to academic administrators-in answering faculty complaints about and objections to student ratings. The interpretation of student ratings as a measure of teaching effectiveness is very controversial. Every year, many new publications claim to "prove" that SRIs are unreliable and invalid, leading faculty and administrators to question the appropriateness of using student ratings to guide personnel decisions. This book presents dozens of concerns, beliefs, and misconceptions, and 'myths' regarding potential biasing factors affecting SRIs that have been reported over the years, and that seem to persist and continue spreading. It also presents highly established research evidence refuting these misconceptions and beliefs. This evidence reveals that SRIs soundly correlate with student learning, with the conceptual structure of effective teaching, and with other criterion measures of effective instruction (i.e. alumni, peer, expert, observer, and self ratings). It also shows that factors controllable by the instructor but unrelated to effective teaching (e.g., course difficulty/workload, grades) as well as factors uncontrollable by the instructor (e.g., class size, discipline) do not bias SRI results. Altogether, the book presents impressive research evidence for the reliability and validity of SRI results. One of the most popular but potentially damaging faculty beliefs is that they can "bribe" students and buy higher ratings by entertaining students, and by reducing difficulty/workload and giving undeserved high grades. Faculty holding this belief may be tempted to manipulate these factors, e.g., to grade higher and to lower the level of difficulty/workload, in order to receive higher ratings from students. These counterproductive behaviors may lead to watering-down the course material and to a decline in the work students invest in their courses, adversely affecting their learning and eventually resulting in and the "dumbing down" of college education. This book presents convincing research evidence that these manipulative behaviors are mostly ineffective in raising teacher ratings. The book incorporates the scholarship of a wide range of researchers and practitioners, including the author's own accumulated knowledge and experience throughout over 30 years of research and practice in this domain. Because this book is designed for administrators and faculty members of a wide spectrum of institutions and academic domains, the content is designed to be simple and intuitive, with no professional jargon or knowledge, so as to make reading easy and smooth for the entire range of target readers. The book also provides simple illustrations of many of the main issues involved, based on studies implemented by the author and often demonstrated through tables and graphs. This book complements another book by the same author that is being published concurrently: Student Ratings of Instruction: A Practical Approach to Designing, Operating, and Reporting. Nonetheless, it can be read independently of the other book. The two books jointly integrate and summarize the conclusions of the major relevant research and publications on student ratings to date, and constitute a reasonably comprehensive overview of the main theoretical and practical issues related to SRIs in higher education.

Details

  • Title Student Ratings of Instruction: Recognizing Effective Teaching
  • Author Nira Hativa
  • Binding Paperback
  • Edition number 1st
  • Edition 1
  • Pages 140
  • Volumes 1
  • Language ENG
  • Publisher Createspace
  • Date 2013-03
  • Illustrated Yes
  • ISBN 9781481054119 / 1481054112
  • Weight 0.43 lbs (0.20 kg)
  • Dimensions 9 x 6 x 0.3 in (22.86 x 15.24 x 0.76 cm)

About the author

Nira Hativa is a professor emeritus of teaching in higher education at Tel-Aviv University (TAU). She received her B.Sc. and M.Sc. degrees in mathematics from the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology and her Ph.D. from Stanford University. Her doctoral dissertation researched effective teaching at that university. In addition to being a faculty member at TAU, she worked as an adjunct faculty at several colleges and a university in the Bay Area, California, and as a teaching consultant and faculty developer at TAU and Stanford University. She has served until recently as the director of the Center for the Advancement of Teaching as well as of the online SRI system at TAU. Over the years, she gave many presentations and workshops on effective university teaching and on student ratings of instruction (SRI) at a variety of American and Israeli colleges and universities and at many international conferences, and consulted several higher-education institutions on the transition from in-class to online ratings. In addition to her many publications in Hebrew, she has published in English five books and numerous research and theory articles and book chapters on issues related to effective teaching in higher education and to SRI. She served on the editorial board of several international journals of education. Since 2002 she has been the editor of a journal in Hebrew on teaching in higher education distributed to all faculty members at Israeli universities and colleges. She spent at Stanford university four year long sabbaticals and within this frame she developed, with the support of the Center for Teaching and Learning at Stanford, two DVDs demonstrating effective teaching strategies, showing clips of classes taught by award-winning teachers at Stanford. She has been an active member of POD (Professional and Organizational Development-the American organization of teaching centers personnel) since 1990 and served until recently as head of the Israeli network of teaching centers in universities and colleges and as the Israeli representative to ICED-the International Consortium for Educational Development.