The document discusses various sources of data that can be used to document teaching effectiveness, including instructor self-assessment, student perceptions, student learning outcomes, peer/colleague reviews, teaching resources, and administrative perspectives. It provides examples of tools that can gather information from these sources, such as course portfolios, teaching journals, student surveys and feedback, classroom observations, peer reviews of materials, and student achievement outcomes. Graphs and matrices are suggested as ways to analyze and visualize trends in student feedback and comments over time.
1. Documenting Teaching Effectiveness: Sources of Data
Instructor Self Assessment – your perceptions of your teaching1
• Course Portfolio – developmental, what you want to think about/know more about2
• Teaching Portfolio – evaluative, what reviewers want to know/assess3
• Teaching Journal – critically reflective teacher/teaching4
• Expanded Teaching Philosophy – to serve as reflective introduction to dossier
Student Perceptions – student perceptions of your teaching
• Midterm / Early term student feedback
• End-of-Term Student Ratings of Teaching
• On-going collection of in-class feedback through short evaluation surveys (eg, new assignments, use of
readings, delivery of class session; Likert & open ended)
• Critical Incident Questionnaire
o At what point in class this week did you feel most engaged with what was happening?
o At what point in class this week did you feel most distanced from what was happening?
o What action that anyone (teacher or student) took in class did you find most affirming & helpful?
o What action that anyone (teacher or student) took in class did you did most puzzling or confusing?
o What about class this week surprised you the most? (From your own reactions to what went on, to
something that someone did, or to anything else that occurs to you as you write now.)
Student Learning – student perceptions of learning as a result of teaching
• Student Feedback through Consensus5
• Develop Classroom Assessment Techniques (CATs) to gather student perceptions of their own
learning and of teaching effectiveness related to particular practices recurring in class sessions,
across a new segment/unit in course, in activities or assignments (eg, interactive lecture technique,
coherence of lecture notes across a new segment of course, use of peer response groups, on
grading practices/rubric, on use of suggested resources)
• Evidence of student achievement (national exams/benchmark outcomes, grad school placement,
thesis completion, student retention/completion; UROP)
• Localize National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE) benchmarks such as use of high impact
activities that "require that students engage in substantive matters while actively interacting and
collaborating with faculty and their peers"
• Develop measures that allow for addressing and analyzing particular forms of resistance to learning
and for aligning student/teacher expectations – consider whether students expect that you will
address, for example, race, class, sexuality in your course? expect that engaged learning will be the
norm for this course? expect to write even if this is not a writing intensive course?
Documenting Evidence of Teaching / Page 1
2. Peer / Colleague Review – peer perceptions of your teaching / learning
• Classroom observation – teaching peers, cohort faculty
• Lesson Study Project (http://www.uwlax.edu/sotl/lsp/)
• Review of instructional materials; syllabus, assignments, exams (Peer Review Project:
www.courseportfolio.org/)
• Review of innovative uses of technology; contributions to distance learning
• Review of engaged pedagogies/approaches to non-traditional students' and learning (eg, service
learning, study abroad, multicultural teaching and learning)
• Mentoring activities – whether being a mentor or a mentee
• Development of teaching- and/or learning-related workshop for peers
• Peer-reviewed teaching/learning article accepted or grant accepted
Teaching / Learning Resources – research-based perceptions of learning
• Engagement with disciplinary journals related to teaching, from course design to assessment of
courses, teaching and learning (eg, incorporation into teaching approach, formation of journal club,
participation in learning community)
• Pursuit of a teaching-related research question to address via Scholarship of Teaching & Learning
• Participation in faculty professional development programming (eg, career programs, New Faculty
Orientation, teaching with writing or technology workshops, multicultural teaching and learning
fellowships/ research programs)
Administrative Perspective – perceptions of teaching role & excellence
• Dossier Requirements/Data to Document Administrative Guidelines (as set by department, college
and/or university-wide policy)
• Evaluative Teaching Portfolios
• Data from curriculum assessment
1. The diagram and its organizing principle are drawn from the Center for Instructional Development and
Research at the University of Washington-Seattle; see
http://depts.washington.edu/cidrweb/consulting/assessment.html. The suggestions derive from multiple
sources, suggestions and experiences shared by CTL consultants.
2. See, for example, http://depts.washington.edu/cidrweb/portfolio/developmental.html or
http://www.courseportfolio.org/peer/pages/index.jsp?what=rootMenuD&rootMenuId=3#benchmark.
3. See, for example: http://depts.washington.edu/cidrweb/portfolio/evaluative.html or
http://www.courseportfolio.org/peer/pages/index.jsp?what=rootMenuD&rootMenuId=3#inquiry.
4. See Stephen Brookfield's resources on Becoming a Critically Reflective Teacher at
http://stephenbrookfield.com/papers.html.
5. University of Minnesota Center for Teaching & Learning:
http://www1.umn.edu/ohr/teachlearn/customized/sfc/index.html
Summarizing by Graphic Displays
Assemble graphs with an explanation: include number of students, dates the courses were taught, qualities
that are being evaluated. A main feature of graphs is that they should be clear, not cluttered. Depending on
your audience, 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 the courses you've actually designed. Either
way, it will be important to describe which courses you've chosen to include and why. See impage on next
page. Credit: http://ftad.osu.edu/portfolio/Feedback.html#graphic.
Documenting Evidence of Teaching / Page 2
3. Plotting Means of Course Evaluations
At the Center for Teaching Effectiveness we have found it useful to plot the progress of teaching in a given
course over several semesters. By laying out general items along a time line, a professor can document trends
in student evaluations. If a single data point is out of line, its impact is lessened by the overview, and the
professor may choose to discuss factors in that particular semester that could have contributed to the
deviation. http://www.utexas.edu/academic/cte/teachfolio.html:
Analyzing Written Comments
Matrix: Laying out a matrix grouping written comments according to the overall course rating given by
each student evaluator provides a context for the comments. An instructor can see what kinds of
comments were made by students who were in general satisfied with the course, and what kind were
made by those who were dissatisfied.. This analysis of written comments sometimes helps to explain
certain positive or negative comments, which might be confided to a small subset of a course. See
matrix image on next page. Credit: http://www.utexas.edu/academic/cte/teachfolio.html.
Documenting Evidence of Teaching / Page 3
4. Summary of Student Feedback with Reflection: Jane Doe / Linguistics
At the end of each quarter, students fill out an Evaluation of Instruction Report. They are asked to rate
aspects of both the course and the instructor using a Likert-type scale of 1 (poor) to 5 (excellent). The overall
rating at the end of my first quarter teaching was 4.2; at the end of my second quarter, this rose slightly to 4.3
More informative evidence came from students’ written evaluations. In evaluating my first quarter of
teaching, student comments were generally favorable, though they sensed my lack of experience as a
teacher. This was not mentioned after my second quarter of teaching, as I felt more comfortable with both the
course content and with leading a classroom. Some students were rather impressed that I learned
everyone’s name quickly – not a frequent occurrence at a large state university. A notable aspect of my
teaching was that I encouraged them to argue against some of the theories presented. One student
described this as “encouraging them to express their own thoughts and feelings.” Other aspects of my
teaching that they praise are that I am well-organized, I pay attention to students’ needs and spend extra
time helping them when necessary, and I foster a relaxed learning environment in class.
Students' main suggestion for improvement was to incorporate more classroom activities. This
corresponds to what I have been learning in professional development workshops: students can have a
richer learning experience when they are engaged in the process. Incorporating activities such as
demonstrations of experiments, videos, and small-group discussions would accomplish several goals. It
would break up the long class time (typically 1 hour, 48 minutes), preventing students from losing attention,
and it would provide opportunities for students to work with the material presented in class in a variety of
ways. (Last 3 examples from http://ftad.osu.edu/portfolio/.)
Documenting Evidence of Teaching / Page 4
5. 1
The diagram and its organizing principle are drawn from the Center for Instructional Development
and Research at the University of Washington-Seattle; see
http://depts.washington.edu/cidrweb/consulting/assessment.html. The suggestions derive from
multiple sources, suggestions and experiences shared by CTL consultants.
2
See, for example, http://depts.washington.edu/cidrweb/portfolio/developmental.html or
http://www.courseportfolio.org/peer/pages/index.jsp?what=rootMenuD&rootMenuId=3#benchmark.
3
See, for example: http://depts.washington.edu/cidrweb/portfolio/evaluative.html or
http://www.courseportfolio.org/peer/pages/index.jsp?what=rootMenuD&rootMenuId=3#inquiry.
4
See Stephen Brookfield's resources on Becoming a Critically Reflective Teacher at
http://stephenbrookfield.com/papers.html.
5
University of Minnesota Center for Teaching & Learning:
http://www1.umn.edu/ohr/teachlearn/customized/sfc/index.html