Are online student evaluations of faculty influenced by the timing of evaluations?

Author:

McNulty John A.12,Gruener Gregory234,Chandrasekhar Arcot3,Espiritu Baltazar5,Hoyt Amy3,Ensminger David6

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cell and Molecular Physiology,

2. Ralph P. Leischner Institute for Medical Education, and

3. Office of Educational Affairs, Stritch School of Medicine, Loyola University, Maywood;

4. Neurology, Loyola University Health System, Chicago; and

5. Departments of 4Medicine and

6. School of Education, Loyola University, Chicago, Illinois

Abstract

Student evaluations of faculty are important components of the medical curriculum and faculty development. To improve the effectiveness and timeliness of student evaluations of faculty in the physiology course, we investigated whether evaluations submitted during the course differed from those submitted after completion of the course. A secure web-based system was developed to collect student evaluations that included numerical rankings ( 1–5) of faculty performance and a section for comments. The grades that students received in the course were added to the data, which were sorted according to the time of submission of the evaluations and analyzed by Pearson's correlation and Student's t-test. Only 26% of students elected to submit evaluations before completion of the course, and the average faculty ratings of these evaluations were highly correlated [ r( 14 ) = 0.91] with the evaluations submitted after completion of the course. Faculty evaluations were also significantly correlated with the previous year [ r( 14 ) = 0.88]. Concurrent evaluators provided more comments that were statistically longer and subjectively scored as more “substantive.” Students who submitted their evaluations during the course and who included comments had significantly higher final grades in the course. In conclusion, the numeric ratings that faculty received were not influenced by the timing of student evaluations. However, students who submitted early evaluations tended to be more engaged as evidenced by their more substantive comments and their better performance on exams. The consistency of faculty evaluations from year to year and concurrent versus at the end of the course suggest that faculty tend not to make significant adjustments to student evaluations.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

General Medicine,Physiology,Education

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