Some subscribers to TIPS might be interested in a recent post "Responses to 
'Why Do Colleges Tie Academic Careers To Winning the Approval of Teenagers?' " 
[Hake (2013)].  The abstract reads:

 **********************************************

ABSTRACT: As of 12 Nov 2013 there had been 19 responses to my post "Why Do 
Colleges Tie Academic Careers To Winning the Approval of Teenagers?" [Hake 
(2013)] at  <http://bit.ly/1bHiHwp>. The above title is taken from Lyell 
Asher's (2013) WSJ piece "When Students Rate Teachers, Standards Drop: Why do 
colleges tie academic careers to winning the approval of teenagers? Something 
is seriously amiss," copied into the APPENDIX of Hake (2013) at 
<http://bit.ly/1bHiHwp> in accord with the "Fair Use" provision of U.S. 
Copyright Law.

Since many of the responses were from those in "Teaching and Learning Centers" 
(TLCs) <http://bit.ly/1aRpLu0>, and since SETs are accepted as the primary 
gauge of teaching effectiveness in most TLCs, it's little wonder that proSET 
responses outnumber antiSET responses 12 to 7.

However, in my view the proSET position is seriously challenged by Herb 
Rotfeld's (2013) thoughtful antiSET arguments.  Rotfeld wrote at 
<http://bit.ly/1dMhvtU>: "While not to dispute the potential value of student 
input, the inherent problem comes from the existence of the SETs. All other 
factors of teaching evaluations take more effort, time and interpretive nuance. 
Everyone who defends the value of the student scoring data states they should 
not be used to rank order faculty, but time and again, because they provide the 
only data that are quantified-appearing, standardized across a campus and easy 
to read, that is exactly how they tend to be used.  Maybe SETs would go down to 
their proper role if they were not campus standardized, quantitative, and 
provided with such fanfare. But until that happens, my stance is that the SETs 
must die so that education can live."

**********************************************

To access the complete 53 kB post please click on <http://bit.ly/1aDcvD7>.

Richard Hake, Emeritus Professor of Physics, Indiana University; (PEDARRII); 
LINKS TO: Academia <http://bit.ly/a8ixxm>; Articles <http://bit.ly/a6M5y0>; 
Blog <http://bit.ly/9yGsXh>; Facebook <http://on.fb.me/XI7EKm>; GooglePlus 
<http://bit.ly/KwZ6mE>; Google Scholar <http://bit.ly/Wz2FP3>; Linked In 
<http://linkd.in/14uycpW>; Research Gate <http://bit.ly/1fJiSwB>; Socratic 
Dialogue Inducing (SDI) Labs <http://bit.ly/9nGd3M>; Twitter 
<http://bit.ly/juvd52>.

 

REFERENCES [URL shortened by <http://bit.ly/> and accessed on 13 Oct. 2013.]

Hake, R.R. 2013. "Responses to 'Why Do Colleges Tie Academic Careers To Winning 
the Approval of Teenagers?' " online on the OPEN! AERA-L archives 
<http://bit.ly/1aDcvD7>. Post of 12 Nov 2013 16:47:49-0500 to AERA-L and 
NetGold. The abstract and link to the complete post are being transmitted to 
various discussion lists and are also on my blog "Hake'sEdStuff" at 
<http://bit.ly/1hDOd5D> with provision for comments.  



---
You are currently subscribed to tips as: arch...@jab.org.
To unsubscribe click here: 
http://fsulist.frostburg.edu/u?id=13090.68da6e6e5325aa33287ff385b70df5d5&n=T&l=tips&o=30095
or send a blank email to 
leave-30095-13090.68da6e6e5325aa33287ff385b70df...@fsulist.frostburg.edu

Reply via email to