1.31.14 HUMX Probationary Faculty Self-Evaluation Meeting
sandbox.drewloewe.net
(.pdf of 2012 calendar year self-eval + mini-portfolio)
Make Course Evaluations More
Substantive
ENGW 2325.01 Evaluations
In addition to the generic evaluation form, I would like you to comment on the following:
How, if at all, the course helped you to grow as a:
writer
thinker
arguer
analyst
editor
proofreader
Whether the professor was helpful, available, and approachable
The substance and sequence of the four major projects (genre, ideological, pentadic, metaphor)
Revision opportunities and policies
The textbook
Peer review policies and practices (helpful and useful, or not?)
Workshops in class (helpful and useful, or not?)
Evidence and Making the Invisible More Visible
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Section 2.5 in the Faculty Manual lists the criteria and types of 1. mandatory and 2. permissible evidence for evaluation.
- Emails as Corroborating Evidence
-
Recommendations--require a brief thank-you email and explain why; students "get it"
- Get in the habit of getting (and giving) emails to document committee work, class visits, etc.
- Tag or label to find easily
- Contextualize assignment evidence in mini-portfolio
- Handouts, key terms, etc.
- Use "big red box" or something similar for paper evidence and digital dumping ground for electronic evidence
Additional Points
- Make case for what you teach, why to teach it, how you teach it, how you evaluate it, and why your grades are the way they are.
- Show that you "hear" (NB: not necessarily "agree with 100%") student feedback. If a student says something that is flat-out wrong and injurious, deal with it directly. Other than that, look for patterns. Feel free to quote favorite excerpts.
Drew Loewe's Slides from 1.31.14 Meeting
By Drew Loewe
Drew Loewe's Slides from 1.31.14 Meeting
For St. Edward's HUMX probationary faculty.
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