Title: Fractal Thoughts on Student Evaluations of Professors
1Fractal Thoughts on Student Evaluations of
Professors
2Fractal Thoughts on Student Evaluations Ratings
of Professors
3The challenge
- Understand nature of the complex subject we are
trying to measure - Decide what we want our tool to do
- Decide instructional dimensions we want to
examine - Create good questions
- Test and tweak the tool
4Plan for today
- Understand the fractal nature of what we are
trying to measure - Understand summative formative
- Learn about instructional dimensions
- Learn about creating good questions
- Consider what we want to have happen
5Fools rush in.
- But, could fractal thinking tell us anything
about student evaluations?
6Whats a fractal?
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8All learning produces complex interconnected affec
tive and cognitive synaptic wiring.
9Cognitive Domain?
- The products of the brain we think of commonly as
the products of learning in formal education such
as knowledge, concepts, skills, evaluative
thinking based on evidence.
10Affective Domain
- The product of the brain that produces the sense
of feelings and emotions that are "complex but
internally consistent qualities of character and
conscience."
(Krathwohl et al., 1964, p.7)
11The affective domain influences
- Attitudes
- Biases
- Enthusiasm
- Ethics
- Likes dislikes
- Motivation
- Self awareness
- Self-esteem
- Sense of responsibility
12Some qualities of learning that involve cognitive
plus affective
- Confidence
- Knowledge
- Preconceptions
- Self assessment
- Skills
- Values including priorities
13There is probably no cognitive learning that does
not involve an affective component.
14Let length of coastline be L. Let divider width
used to measure L be r.
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17A curious quality of fractals they have no
absolute dimensions
18In a fractal form, size depends on the tool of
measure.
They don't have absolute dimensions, but they
have order.
19"The harder I try to measure it, the bigger it
seems to get."
20"The more I study it, the less I seem to know."
21Teaching is so complex that we cant really
identify good teaching.
22Reflection Exercise 1
- How might fractal thinking explain the following
observation by Bob Leamnson?
23Turn to your neighbor. Evaluate the described
practice from a fractal thinker's view.
Over 25 years I was evaluated by more than 100
groups of students. For about 18 of those years,
I participated in annual reviews of my
departmental colleagues and in those of all Arts
and Science departments at the college level. The
methods were virtually invariable. Whenever a
rating form had a global question, it alone was
considered and all else simply ignored! If, in
the real world, you put a global question on the
rating form...the global question is the end-all
and be-allthe alpha and the omega. Leamnson,
November, 2005
24The brain learns by building and stabilizing
neural connections (see Leamnson, 1999).
25Quiz time!
- How many letters are in the English alphabet?
- How many words can those letters produce?
- How many ideas can be expressed by those words?
- How many stories are possible?
- And we can consider the above for just one
discipline in one language! - And even consider the extent to which all human
knowledge/experience can be described by words.
26A difference between content and learned content
- Content is roughly finite and quantifiable
- Once in the brain, learned content becomes part
of a network of thought and feeling that is
infinite
27All learning produces complex interconnected affec
tive and cognitive synaptic wiring.
28How do we diagnose MBTI or Multiple Intelligences?
What makes us think we can evaluate a teacher
from one global question--or even one tool?
29From Petersen, S.E., Fox, P.T., Posner, M.I.,
Mintun, M. Raichle, M.E. (1989) Positron
emission tomographic studies of the processing of
single words, Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience,
1, 153-170.
30Generators arent usually recognized for their
true power. Through recursive operations their
influence grows, persists, pervades and shapes
the final outcomes.
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32Illustration of the power of generators
- Ambadys and Rosenthals (1993) "thin slices"
studies determined that students arrive at
ratings for teachers after watching 30 seconds of
silent content-free video that are highly
consistent (r 0.76) with end-of-semester
ratings. - What insight does this provide to understanding
student ratings?
33Practical realizations that arise from this
concept
- Single measures can't work
- Single instructional methods are limited
- Single tools likely can't tell us nearly enough
34Given this background, let's now concentrate on
student ratings forms
35Historical Benchmarks
- First ratings studies Herman Remmers, 1928
- Formative/summative Mike Scriven, 1967
- Dimensions of Teaching Ken Feldman, 1989
36Consider the nature of summative surveysOn a
scale from 4 (outstanding) to 1 (poor) rate
- The course instructor
- The course
- The overall learning experience
37Pause to Look at Instructional Dimensions and
Their Definitions
38Pedagogy Formative Surveys
- These look for useful teaching traits in terms of
the dimensions and the degree to which each is
visible to students. - Provide a pedagogical fingerprint
- Multiple measures -- specifics without global
generalizations - Firmly grounded in the research
39Pause to look at a formative survey
Then, consider how the summative and formative
might differ in the nature of the sample that
each obtains from a neural network.
40Concepts of Teaching Evaluation based on Single
Global Versus Multiple Formative Measures
41Graphic output from formative evaluation tool
42Teaching for Learning Satisfaction (after K.
Feldman, 1997 1998)
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46Next, let's map a form onto the dimensions
- We want to know what dimensions we want to
measure - Mapping gives us a check
- Based on the fractal character that shows dangers
of single measures, we would like to have two or
three for each dimension we choose. - Work time follows--take out the sheet that looks
like the slide that follows
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48Do a summative item "My overall satisfaction
with this workshop now isRate from 4
(outstanding) to 1 (poor)--Rate that now.
Next,do a formative item rate from 4 (strongly
agree) to 1 (strongly disagree) "The instructor
uses examples and illustrations." Rate that now.
49Reflection Exercise 4
- Contrast the thinking and feeling that occurred
in each rating. How were they similar? How did
they differ?
50Considerations
- Do we want to use this for personnel decisions?
- Do we want a bank of items for faculty
improvement? - Do we want option for supplemental faculty items?
- Do we want option for supplemental unit level
items? - Do we want to align our evaluation/rewards with
our mission? - Let's finally look at a sample of a university
doing the last-University of Minnesota--a work in
progress.
51But"Student satisfaction and pedagogical
practices are not what my course is about
- So, enter the knowledge survey--which is a
special kind of student evaluation
52Concept of a Knowledge Survey
1. I have insufficient knowledge to answer this
question. 2. I have partial knowledge or know
where to quickly (20 minutes or less) obtain a
complete answer to this question. 3. I can
fully answer this question with my present
knowledge.
53Consider a concept. (GCI item). First, rate your
confidence to explain the concept within the item
to follow on a scale from 3 (I know it and can
teach it right now) to 1 (I'm not at all sure)
- Are rocks and minerals alive?
- (A) Yes, rocks and minerals grow
- (B) Yes, rocks are made up of minerals, and
minerals are analogous to plant cells - (C) Yes, rocks and minerals are always changing
- (D) No, rocks and minerals don't reproduce
- (E) No, rocks and minerals are not made up of
atoms
Next, answer the question.
54.what knowledge surveys sample
55All learning produces complex interconnected affec
tive and cognitive synaptic wiring,
and knowledge surveys sample a mix of both.
56Enough!
- This is not a knowledge survey workshop.
- However, consider the nature of the three student
ratings we have examined
57Suggestion triangulate a global summative item
with a profile of pedagogical practices and a
profile of learned material.
58END! (phew!!)
- Think about and discuss these ideas over lunch.
59Reliability of 40 pt Formative Survey