Class ratings may go public

The results of the university-distributed professor evaluations
could potentially be made available to students within the upcoming
academic year.

The numerical data from the end-of-quarter professor evaluations
are at the center of a proposal currently in the works by Marwa
Kaisey, president of the Undergraduate Students Association
Council.

According to the Daily Bruin archives, professor evaluations
were available in booklets published by the Office of Instructional
Development until 1995. The booklets were discontinued because of
high printing costs.

But it is high time to bring them back, Kaisey said.

In her term as general representative for USAC last year, Kaisey
came to believe that students need a more statistically reliable
source of information about how former students felt about their
classes than bruinwalk.com, the Web site many students currently
use to evaluate professors.

Bruinwalk.com allows students to rate aspects of a professor
such as effectiveness, difficulty and availability on a scale of
one to 10.

Kaisey is currently preparing a proposal for the new evaluation
system to submit to the Academic Senate.

“We saw a real need for more information on the teaching
systems of the professors,” Kaisey said.

The professor evaluations probably provide the most
representative data of student reactions to particular professors,
said Dwight Read, chairman of the UCLA Faculty Association and a
professor of anthropology.

“In a general sense, I think it’s reasonable for
students to get more information about courses,” Read
said.

However, Read said, faculty privacy is a concern which
constantly comes up in releasing information such as professor
evaluations to the public.

The current widespread quibble with bruinwalk.com is that the
site allows students to post anonymous comments about professors,
an aspect which Kaisey believes should be changed.

“Right now through bruinwalk anyone can review any class.
It’s kind of a free-for-all, so we want to get it more
organized through the university,” Kaisey said.

In an ideal situation, Kaisey would allow professors a space to
fill out a blurb about themselves, and students wouldn’t be
able to write comments about professors.

There are a few concerns that come up with Kaisey’s
proposed system of using only the numerical data from the
end-of-quarter evaluations, Read said.

One concern Read presented is that the written data on the back
of the evaluations are the most useful part of the process and
convey an entirely different impression than the numerical scores
alone do.

The other concern that comes up with student evaluations is
grade inflation, which has increased substantially over the years.
According to Read, if faculty perceive that students evaluate them
in terms of how many people get As and Bs in their courses and know
that those evaluations are used by their departments in the review
process, it can be seriously problematic.

“The problem is more in terms of how faculty perceive the
evaluations are used in the review process,” Read said.

For now, the idea of seeing the results of the end-of-quarter
evaluations seems like a good one to Maxwell Kaizer, a fourth-year
art history student.

“They’ll have a lot of information that would be
useful,” Kaizer said.

As to not seeing the written comments on the backs of the
evaluation forms, Kaizer said, “It’s OK because a lot
of times people will get really personal with what they write on
the back.”

Though he doesn’t enjoy filling out the professor
evaluations, Kaizer said he and other students would probably spend
more time on them if they knew the data would be published
online.

“In big classes a lot of times when people get the
evaluation forms a lot of people just get up and leave,”
Kaizer said. “Less people will leave if they get to see the
actual, physical information online.”

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