ProDAIT - Professional development for academics involved in teaching. ProDAIT - Professional development for academics involved in teaching.
Peer Observation of Teaching
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Assessment tools for evaluating teaching quality

When assessment of quality is the focus of teaching observation, particularly when a written assessment of a faculty member will result, a range of assessment tools should be employed. These may include:

Self review: This may range from a relatively brief account, to something much more substantial, for example:

  • a few comments included in the papers that you prepare for your regular staff development review;
  • a citation and record of achievement prepared for a specific purpose, such as an application for a UK National Teaching Fellowship, or for promotion. These reviews must usually conform to a specified format;
  • a much more substantial teaching portfolio.
  • Flinders University offers further ideas for evaluation and review, including a self-evaluation inventory
  • There is more on recording achievements in the section on records and evidence of teaching activity

Student evaluation:

Peer review:

  • Peer review is similar to peer observation of teaching, in that it may be done for developmental purposes, but it also incorporates an evaluative aspect. The University of Wisconsin-Madison gives a more detailed definition.
  • Further information, including a list of characteristics of good teaching that may form the basis for criteria for peer review, is given on the University of Reading's website.
  • We recommend the University of Tasmania's Guide to Peer Review of Teaching, which offers a wide range of summative and formative observation schedules for lectures, tutorials, laboratory sessions, supervisions etc.
  • Flinders University also has guidelines and some examples of the types of report that might result from a peer review

Each of these tools can address some issues of teaching quality and effectiveness, but not all issues. Triangulation, or viewing from a combination of perspectives, is essential to arrive at a reasonably valid and accurate evaluation of teaching quality and effectiveness.

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