Generalizability of Multidimensional Student Ratings of University Instruction Across Courses and Teachers |
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Authors: | Rindermann Heiner Schofield Neville |
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Institution: | (1) Institut für Psychologie, Otto-von-Guericke-Universität Magdeburg, Postfach 4120, D-39016 Magdeburg, Germany;(2) University of Newcastle, Australia |
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Abstract: | Course quality is multifaceted, being determined by instructor, students, and external conditions. Consequently, any attempt at measurement should reflect this diversity, so that stable evaluations can be made that reflect both personal (instructor) and situational (student and external conditions) variables. This study extends previous research by examining the stability of both dimensions across different courses, student populations, and universities. In addition, the sample (N = 692 courses) was drawn from 6 traditional and technical German universities that have a different ethos of student interaction with academic staff than those in many other Western countries. Using the Heidelberg Inventory, it was found that instructor variables were reliable across courses given by the same instructor, but student scales or background variables were less consistent across courses in which the content was identical. It was concluded that the instrument was both reliable and valid for student evaluations of both teaching performance and course quality within a European context. |
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Keywords: | student evaluation of instruction generalizability higher education intraclass-correlation multifactorial model of teaching quality |
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