Arts and Sciences Council Considers New Course Evaluations
Friday, January 5, 2001
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"The Green Sheet" - the course evaluation form used by students -
is a Duke tradition, but few people seem to have kind words to say
about it. Students never like filling out the forms at the end of
the semester, and teachers have more than a few concerns about
their accuracy and efficacy.
The Arts and Sciences Council on Dec. 16 got its first official
look at a proposed form developed by a group led by Dean Robert
Thompson and endorsed by Provost Peter Lange. The form has
different questions than The Green Sheet, but includes the
potential for more expanded comments, which Thompson said provide
the most valuable information for faculty and students alike.
Thompson is proposing using the form for a test semester this
spring, then revisiting the question in the fall.
In presenting the form to the council, Lange said the
administration wanted a form that could better measure course
instruction, could compare classes against other courses at Duke,
be machine readable, would stimulate additional comments from
students and would provide useful information for appointments,
promotions and tenure decisions.
Hanging over the effort is an attempt by Duke Student Government to
come up with an online course evaluation system that would be run
by students. This system would replace an online system that was
pulled last year after teachers complained it was attracting too
few comments and was plagued with inaccuracies.
A DSG representative was at the council meeting endorsing the new
form developed by the Thompson group. Thompson said if the council
approves the new form it would render the DSG effort moot, but that
without the form the student project would go forward.
Nevertheless, there were some faculty concerns about the proposed
form. They included questions about the wording of some items,
about who would have access to the data, about the quality of the
comments on the form, even about whether a form was necessary at
all.
Since the forms can be used in APT decisions, faculty members have
good reason to pay attention to the student responses.
Lange was asked whether the form would encourage students to think
more deeply about the course experience than The Green Sheet. "I
had my own staff try the form as an experiment," he said. "In
general it took 10-15 minutes, which is longer than with the Green
Sheet, but not by much. Some of my staff thought it limited
additional comments, but others thought that it stimulated such
comments. I think that's reason for us to try it out and find out
how it works."
The council will resume the discussion in January, and council
chair Steve Baldwin said it's likely a vote will occur then.