Course Evaluation Data and Information

for English 583: Studies in Writing Across the Curriculum

Fall Semester, 1999

Prof. Chris M. Anson


Before you begin: I strongly believe that teaching well is a lifelong pursuit--an art to be explored and developed, and a science that constantly presents new challenges and opportunities for analysis and growth. As a teacher, I am very much a learner. I need to reflect on what I'm doing and how I'm doing it. Student evaluations are one source of information for me to reflect and improve. As such, I use them formatively, as information helpful in the improvement of a significant part of my professional life: teaching students and teaching other teachers.

But student evaluations can also have a more public function, displaying areas of my teaching that students find to be strong, and areas they find to be in need of improvement. Below, you will see evaluation data from the course and term indicated above, along with a bit of reflection from me about what I see in these numbers and comments. Please use this information responsibly. If you're deciding whether to take a course from me, consider what you see here not only as evidence of ability, but as evidence of my willingness to listen to your peers and improve my teaching in ways that respond to their justified concerns and needs. If you're a fellow professional looking at these data because you want to learn about or evaluate my work, please consider them only as one part of an overall plan for teacher effectiveness and a lifelong pursuit of excellence.

After the numerical data are anonymously written comments from the students in the course. I have created a kind of "dialogue" from some of these comments by interspersing my own (italicized) thoughts and reflections. In some cases, I've made notes about ways to address specific concerns the next time I teach the course. By working on areas of concern, I can then match student opinions in future courses against those here to see whether the changes are having a positive impact on the course and on students.


 

The following chart shows each question on the NC State Department of English Course Evaluation Form. In the first box after the question appears the weighted mean of the results for that question (based on a scale of 1-5, as shown below). In the second box is a comparison with the weighted mean on that question for all courses taught in the English Department that term. 5.0 is the highest mean score possible (every student would give a score of 5 on that question). Numbers in red indicate that the average is higher than that for the department.

 

Score of 5:
Strongly Agree
Score of 4:
Agree
Score of 3:
Neutral
Score of 2:
Disagree
Score of 1:
Strongly Disagree

 


QUESTION FROM FORM
Mean Score
Comparison
 
(Anson)
( Dept. Ave.)
1. The instructor presented materials clearly and effectively.
4.33
4.39
2. The assignments were relevant to course objectives.
4.83
4.54
3. The instructor's expectations on assignments were clearly explained before the assign. was due.
4.33
4.32
4. The instructor returned graded papers in time to help me with the next assignment.
4.67
4.28
5. The instructor's comments on my work explained what I had done well.
4.83
4.32
6. The instructor willingly made himself available for assistance outside class.
4.83
4.46
7. The instructor stimulated interest in the subject and motivated learning.
4.67
4.20
8. The instructor challenged me to draw upon my strongest intellectual resources.
4.67
4.14
9. The instructor was well-prepared and used class time well.
4.17
4.35
10. The instructor treated me with professional courtesy.
5.00
4.53
11. The instructor encouraged student participation.
5.00
4.52
12. The instructor held me to a high standard of performance.
4.67
4.40
13. Overall, the instructor did a good job in teaching this course.
4.83
4.43

 



Average of all 13 scores (Anson):

4.68

Average of all 13 scores (whole department):

4.37


 


What these numbers are telling me:

 


Anonymous Written Comments from Students (from the evaluations):

 

 

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