Listen "Why Faculty Hate Teaching Evaluations"
Episode Synopsis
On paper, student teaching evaluations make a lot of sense. Who is better positioned to say whether a professor did a good job than the students who took the course? But dig a little deeper, and there’s good reason to question whether colleges should be relying on teaching evaluations to inform big decisions about an instructor’s promotion, pay, or even continued employment. So what’s wrong with this system? And why do colleges still cling to it, despite research that shows it’s flawed?
Related Reading:
Sign up for The Chronicle’s Teaching Newsletter (The Chronicle)
Teaching Evaluations are Broken. Can They Be Fixed? (The Chronicle)
A University Overhauled Its Course Evaluation to Get Better Feedback. Here’s What Changed. (The Chronicle)
Meta-analysis of faculty’s teaching effectiveness: Student evaluation of teaching ratings and student learning are not related. (ScienceDirect)
Guest:
Beckie Supiano, senior writer at The Chronicle of Higher Education
For more on today’s episode, visit chronicle.com/collegematters.
Related Reading:
Sign up for The Chronicle’s Teaching Newsletter (The Chronicle)
Teaching Evaluations are Broken. Can They Be Fixed? (The Chronicle)
A University Overhauled Its Course Evaluation to Get Better Feedback. Here’s What Changed. (The Chronicle)
Meta-analysis of faculty’s teaching effectiveness: Student evaluation of teaching ratings and student learning are not related. (ScienceDirect)
Guest:
Beckie Supiano, senior writer at The Chronicle of Higher Education
For more on today’s episode, visit chronicle.com/collegematters.
More episodes of the podcast College Matters from The Chronicle
Obama to Colleges: WTF
15/10/2025
Trump’s ‘Compact’ Is Freaking People Out
08/10/2025
The Research Trump Hates
24/09/2025
Chris Rufo Floats Calling in ‘Troops’
17/09/2025
The Meaning of Charlie Kirk
11/09/2025
College Matters Is Back
03/09/2025
Course Catalog: Do Dogs Go to Heaven?
22/07/2025
Course Catalog: Food for Thought — Literally
08/07/2025