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Using IDEA for Faculty Evaluation Shelley A. Chapman, PhD Texas A & M University February 2013

Using IDEA for Faculty Evaluation

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Using IDEA for Faculty Evaluation. Shelley A. Chapman, PhD. Texas A & M University February 2013. Plan for this Session. “Teaching Effectiveness”  What it is Uniqueness of IDEA Conditions for the Good Use of IDEA 3-Phase Process for Faculty Evaluation Using Reports to Improve Teaching. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Using IDEA for Faculty Evaluation

Shelley A. Chapman, PhDTexas A & M University February 2013

Page 2: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Plan for this Session “Teaching Effectiveness” What it is Uniqueness of IDEA Conditions for the Good Use of IDEA 3-Phase Process for Faculty

Evaluation Using Reports to Improve Teaching

Page 3: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Most SurveysHow well do the instructor’s methods resemble those of a “model” teacher?

How well do students rate their progress on the types of learning the instructor targeted?

Teaching Effectiveness

Page 4: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

What makes IDEA unique?1. Focus on Student

Learning 2. Focus on Instructor’s

Purpose3. Adjustments for

Extraneous Influences4. Validity and Reliability5. Comparison Data6. Flexibility

Page 5: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Conditions for Good Use

The instrument o Focuses on learning o Provides suggested

action steps

Page 6: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Conditions for Good Use

The Facultyo Trust the processo Value student

feedbacko Are motivated to

make improvements

Page 7: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Conditions for Good Use

Campus Cultureo Teaching excellence - high

priorityo Resources to improve -

providedo Student ratings -

appropriate weight

Page 8: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Conditions for Good Use

The Evaluation Processo 30-50% of evaluation of teachingo 6-8 classes, more if small (<10)oNot over-interpreted

(3-5 performance categories)

Page 9: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Underlying Philosophy of IDEA

Teaching effectiveness is determined primarily by students’ progress on the types of learning the instructor targets.

Page 10: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Faculty Information Form

Page 11: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Diagnostic Report Overview

1. How did students rate their learning experience?

2. What contextual factors impacted those ratings?

3. How do my scores compare to: IDEA, discipline, and institution?

4. What might I do to facilitate better learning for my students next time?

Page 12: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Wisdom

Knowledge

InformationData

What the Report Can Provide

Calculation of Scores

Context: Variables and Comparisons

Suggested Action Steps

Page 13: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Using IDEA

As Part of a Faculty Evaluation Process

Page 14: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Multiple forms of Assessment

Student Ratings

External PerspectiveArtifacts

BalancedPlan for SummativeEvaluation

Page 15: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Evidence of Good Teaching

Artifacts

• Syllabi• Graphic Organizers• Assignments and project

descriptions• Rubrics• Written Teaching

Philosophy/Reflections• Samples of Student Work• CATs and results

Page 16: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Evidence of Good Teaching

• Classroom Observation• Classroom Visitation• Invited Presentations• Alumni Surveys• Focus Groups of

Graduating Students

External Perspectiv

e

Page 17: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Classroom ObservationsTime What Happened What Was Said

Page 18: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Classroom ObservationsTime What Happened What Was Said

8:05

8:10

8:15

Instructor shut door

Students are shuffling papers, opening books.

Student comes in late

Several students raise hands

Female in first row is called on

Instructor (I): OK, Class. Let’s begin. Make sure you turned in your homework as you came in.

Today we will begin our discussion on the brain. Turn in your textbooks to chapter 5.

Is your brain more like a computer or a jungle? Who would like to respond first?

Student (S) My brain is a jungle! I am so unorganized! (class laughs)…

Page 19: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Flow of Communication MapInstructor

M

F

F

F

M M M M M

M M

M

F F F F

F

F

F

F F

Page 20: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Evidence of Good Teaching

• Administer Appropriately• Collect 6-8 Reports (more if class size is <10)• 30-50% of Overall Evaluation

Student

Ratings

Page 21: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Evidence of Good Teaching

• Student Comments-formative • Be mindful of standard error of

measurement (±.3)• Use 3-5 Performance Categories

Student

Ratings

Page 22: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Three-Phase Process for Faculty Evaluation

Set Expectations

Collect Data

Use Data

Page 23: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Three-Phase Process for Faculty Evaluation

Set Expectations

Collect Data

Use Data

I. Set ExpectationsWhat does this entail regarding IDEA?

Page 24: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Criterion-Referenced Standards

Criteriono Use averages on 5-

point scaleo Recognize that

some objectives are more difficult to achieve

o “Authenticate” objectives

Page 1

Page 25: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Norm-Referenced Standards

Use Converted Averages

o IDEAo Disciplineo Institutio

n

Page 26: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Comparison Information: Converted Averages

Page 27: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

T-Score Distribution

40%

Similar

Lower20%10%

Much Lower

10%Much Higher

20%Higher

Gray Band

Page 28: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Comparison Scores

Page 29: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Create Categories of Performance

Below Acceptable Standards

Marginal, Needs Improvement

MeetsExpectations

ExceedsExpectations

Outstanding

Does Not Meet Expectations Meets Expectations Exceeds Expectations

Page 30: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Performance Categories: EXAMPLECriterionAverage Rating

Effectiveness Category

NormativeT-Score

Below 3.0 Below acceptable standards Below 38

3.0-3.4 Marginal, improvement needed

38-44

3.5-3.9 Meets expectations 45-54

4.0-4.4 Exceeds expectations 55-62

4.5 or higher Outstanding 63 or higher

Page 31: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Three-Phase Process for Faculty Evaluation

Set Expectations

Collect Data

Use Data

II. Collect DataWhat do you look for regarding IDEA?

Page 32: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Improving Online Response Rates

• Create value for student feedback

• Monitor and Communicate through multiple modalities:• Twitter• Facebook• Other

• Prepare Students• Talk about it• Syllabus

Page 33: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Example: Course Syllabus

Objective 3: Learning to apply course material (to improve thinking, problem solving, and decisions)

Students will be able to apply the methods, processes, and principles of earth science to understanding natural phenomenaStudents will think more critically about the earth and environment

Objective 8: Developing skill in expressing myself orally or in writing

Students will be able to present scientific results in written and oral forms

IDEA Center Learning Objective

Course Learning Outcomes

Page 34: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

For Personnel Decisions

Pages 1 and 2 What were students’ perceptions of the

course and their learning?

Page 35: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Things toConsider…

Were the appropriate objectives selected?

• How many?• Do they match the course?

• How might you “authenticate” the objectives selected?

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FIF: Selecting Objectives• 3-5 as “Essential” or

“Important”o Is it a significant part of the

course?o Do you do something

specific to help students accomplish the objective?

o Does the student’s progress on the objective influence his or her grade?Be true to your course.

Page 37: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Things to Consider…

What were the students’ perceptions of their course and their learning?

Page 38: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

How Did Students Rate Their Learning?

Page 39: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Your Average (5-point Scale)

Raw Adj.

A. Progress on Relevant Objectives1

Four objectives were selected as relevant (Important or Essential—see page 2)

4.1 4.3

1If you are comparing Progress on Relevant Objectives from one instructor to another, use the converted average.

How Did Students Rate Their Learning?

Page 40: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

ProgressOnRelevantObjectives

4

4.3 + 4.34.14.23.6 5

Page 41: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Summary Evaluation: Five-Point Scale

Report Page 1

Your Average Score

(5-point scale)

Raw Adj.

A. Progress on Relevant ObjectivesFour objectives were selected as relevant (Important or Essential—see page 2)

4.1 4.3

Overall Ratings B. Excellent Teacher 4.7 4.9 C. Excellent Course 4.1 4.4

D. Average of B & C 4.4 4.7

Summary Evaluation(Average of A & D) 4.3 4.5

50%

25%25%

Page 42: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Understanding Adjusted Scores

Page 43: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Work Habits

(Item 43)

Student Motivation (Item 39)

 

HighHigh Avg.

 

Avg.LowAvg.

 

Low

High 4.48 4.38 4.28 4.13 4.04

High Avg. 4.38 4.29 4.14 3.96 3.76

Average 4.28 4.14 4.01 3.83 3.64

Low Avg. 4.15 4.05 3.88 3.70 3.51

Low 4.11 3.96 3.78 3.58 3.38

Impact of Extraneous Factors

Gaining Factual Knowledge – Average Progress Ratings

Technical Report 12, page 40

Page 44: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Work Habits

(Item 43)

Student Motivation (Item 39)

 

HighHigh Avg.

 

Avg.LowAvg.

 

Low

High 4.48 4.38

High Avg. 4.38 4.29

Average 4.01

Low Avg. 3.70 3.51

Low 3.58 3.38

Impact of Extraneous Factors

Gaining Factual Knowledge – Average Progress Ratings

Technical Report 12, page 40

Page 45: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Raw or Adjusted Scores

Purpose Raw or Adjusted?How much did students learn? Raw

What were the instructor’s contributions to learning?

Adjusted

How do faculty compare?

Adjusted

Page 46: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Doraw

scores meet or exceed

Expectations?*

Are adjusted

scores lower or higher than

rawscores?

Use adjusted

scoresUse

raw scores

Lower Yes

Higher

When to Use Adjusted Scores

*Expectations defined by your unit.

No

Page 47: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Three-Phase Process for Faculty Evaluation

Set Expectations

Collect Data

Use Data

III. Use DataWhich data will you use and how?

Page 48: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

.

IDEA Faculty Worksheet

Keep track of reports Look for longitudinal trends Use for promotion and tenure

Created by Pam Milloy, Grand View University

Available from The IDEA Center Website

Page 49: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Using the DataSummative (pp.1-

2) Criterion or Norm-

referenced Adjusted or raw Categories of

Performance 30-50% of Teaching

Evaluation 6-8 Classes (more if

small)

Formative (p.3) Identify areas to

improve Access applicable

resources from IDEA website

Read and have conversations

Implement new ideas

Page 50: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Reflective Practice

Collect Feedback

Interpret Results

Read & Learn

Reflect & Discuss

Improve

IDEA resources that are keyed to reports

Talk with colleagues

Try new ideas Online, Paper

What the reports sayand what they mean

Page 51: Using IDEA for  Faculty Evaluation

Research

Relationship of Learning Objectives to Teaching

Methods

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Information Improvement

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Information Improvement

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Questions?