Teaching & Learning Inquiry: The ISSOTL Journal (Sep 2018)

Making Meaning from Student Evaluations of Teaching (SETs)–Seeing beyond our own horizons

  • Carina Jia Yan Zhu,
  • Diana White,
  • Janet Rankin,
  • Christina Jean Davison

DOI
https://doi.org/10.20343/teachlearninqu.6.2.10
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 2
pp. 127 – 142

Abstract

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Within postsecondary education, the assessment of effective teaching has largely relied upon student evaluations of teaching. However, the process through which teachers make sense of their student evaluations is unclear. A research team of six undergraduate nursing students and four nursing educators explored the research question: How do nursing educators make meaning from their student evaluations of teaching? Gadamerian hermeneutics guided unstructured interviews with nursing educators working at a Middle East campus of a Canadian university. The interview transcripts were interpreted through a process of naïve readings, rereadings, interpretive dialogues, and interpretive writing that generated the following hermeneutic interpretations: • Teachers make meaning of their student evaluation through generalized subjective characterizations of students and through their expressed intentions for their teacher-student relationships. • Some of these characterizations and expressed intentions obscured what truths could be learned from the student evaluations of teaching. • The experience of receiving critical student feedback invoked a personal response, at the same time, paradoxically, teachers worked hard to “not take it personally.” We suggest the practice of deep listening as a way to understand students’ feedback. The main takeaway message from this research is that teachers need a supportive and sustaining community of peers who are also open to listening deeply to the truths embedded in student evaluations of teaching.

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