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These narratives should describe teaching evaluations over time to look for trends or changes, specifically focusing on the last three years. (Graduate Students may have fewer evaluations.)
Student evaluations
Summarize student evaluations for your courses. These evaluations may include end-of-semester course or teaching evaluations, results of midterm chats, or other midterm evaluations. Include information on the instrument(s) used. For evaluations that are not numerical, explain evaluation method used and summarize those evaluations. Contextualize the evaluations to help provide a more accurate interpretation.
Peer evaluations
Summarize any additional peer evaluations (formal or informal, formative or summative) such as peer observations, peer reviews of teaching materials, etc. Include frequency, format or procedure, instruments, information on the specific courses evaluated, the content of peer reviews, and the credentials of peer evaluators of your teaching. These could include observations by those who have visited your classes, reviews of course syllabi and materials, reviews of technology used in instruction such as web sites, etc.
Self-evaluations
Describe any self-evaluations you have completed. This can include narratives you have done as a part of annual productivity reports, analyses you have done while participating in teaching workshops at conferences or elsewhere, reflections based on reviewing video footage of yourself teaching either through the Center for Integrated Professional Development or independently, or other forms of self-evaluation. Summarize the key findings of your self-evaluations, including providing contextual information such as your motivation, your areas of focus and goals for each evaluation, and how you have used what you learned to improve your teaching.
Reflection on evaluations
Explain what you have learned from the accumulation of evaluations over time and from different perspectives, how those insights have shaped your teaching and you as a teacher, and how you will incorporate the insights into your future teaching.
Do:
- Include summaries of the various types of evaluation that you utilize paired with contextual explanations and your reflections on these evaluations.
The Best Portfolios:
- Curate the information selected to represent evaluations. This is not meant to be a place for a comprehensive compilation of student ratings of teaching.
- Synthesize the information provided, including using tables if it is an efficient method for conveying data summaries.
- Balance qualitative and quantitative data (if applicable) to describe evaluations.
- Recognize that reflection is a key part of this process. Be conscious of providing a cohesive picture of your reflections as you compose these documents.
- Focus on the ways in which other elements of the portfolio—teaching challenge, teaching philosophy, teaching development plan, etc.—are connected to both teaching evaluations reflections on these evaluations (e.g. I responded to this critique by doing X, which is detailed in section Y).
- Remember that context matters. Information such as how many times you’ve taught the course, teaching load, number of students in the course, and all sorts of other factors contribute to the context of your evaluations.
- Prioritize evaluations that are based on ISU teaching, but may include non-ISU evaluation data if there is a significant reason for inclusion.
Don't:
- Make this section solely about numbers.
- Hesitate to include “negative” evaluations; these, along with positive evaluations, offer you something to reflect on.
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