About the Author.
Preface to the Third Edition.
Acknowledgments.
Introduction: Preliminary Issues in Planning of the Development of a Comprehensive Faculty Evaluation System.
The New Paradigm.
Faculty Evaluation: Fast, Fair, Cheap (Pick Any Two).
The Trap of Best Practices.
Systematic Faculty Involvement.
Fundamental Definitions and Assumptions.
College Teaching as Meta-Profession.
Linking Faculty Evaluation and Faculty Development.
Obstacles to Establishing Successful Programs.
Common Errors.
Guidelines for Overcoming Obstacles and Avoiding Errors.
Practical Considerations in Planning the Development of Your Faculty Evaluation System.
Data Storage and Confidentiality.
Using This Book.
References.
1. Step 1: Determining the Faculty Role Model.
References.
2. Step 2: Determining Faculty Role Model Parameter Values.
Establishing Parameter Values.
Determining College or Institutional Parameter Values.
Dealing With "Outliers".
3. Step 3: Defining Roles in the Faculty Role Model.
Defining the Teaching Role: Perspectives on the Definition of Teaching.
Defining Teaching for Faculty Evaluation and Development Systems.
Defining Other Roles.
Completing Step 3: Determining Role Definitions for Your Faculty Role Model.
References.
4. Step 4: Determining Role Component Weights.
Case 1: Component Weights Fixed.
Case 2: Required and Optional Components With Fixed or Variable Weights.
Case 3: Mix of Required an Optional Components With Fixed or Variable Weights Gathering the Role Component Weight Information.
5. Step 5: Determining Appropriate Sources of Information.
6. Step 6: Determining the Source Impact Weights.
Determining the Source Weights .Determining the Source Impact.
7. Step 7: Determining How Information Should Be Gathered.
8. Step 8: Completing the System: Selecting or Designing Forms, Protocols, and Rating Scale.
Common Numerical Rating Scale.
Faculty Evaluation Tools and Procedures.
Timetable for Developing a Comprehensive Faculty Evaluation System.
9. Generating an Overall Composite Rating.
Computing the Composite Role Rating.
Individualizing the Evaluations: the Overall Composite Ratings (OCR).
Responding to Concerns in Using a Single Numerical Index (OCR).
10. Using the OCR in Promotion, Tenure, Merit Pay, and Post-Tenure Review Decisions.
Promotion Decisions.
Tenure Decisions.
Post-Tenure Review.
Using the OCR in Merit Pay Decisions.
Summary.
References.
11. Operating the Faculty Evaluation System: Peer Input and Review Issues.
Who Is a Peer?
What Information Can Peers Provide?
Gathering Peer Input.
Adapting Traditional Peer Review and Evaluation Systems.
Peer Observation of Classroom Performance.
Conclusion.
References.
12. Student Ratings: What More Than 80 Years of Research Tell Us.
What Is Validity?
What Does the Research Tell Us?
Summary.
References.
13. Operating the Faculty Evaluation System: Issues in Designing and Using Student rating Forms.
Legal Issues.
Designing a Valid and Reliable Student Rating Form.
Administering Student Rating Systems.
Options for Administering Ratings Forms in Class.
The Student Rating Report.
Format of the Student Rating Form Computerized Analysis Output.
Interpreting and Using Student Rating Results.
Faculty Evaluation and Professional Enrichment.
Online Student Ratings.
References.
14. Catalog of Student Rating Items.
Contents.
Instructional Design.
Instructional Delivery.
Instructional Assessment.
Course Management.
Self-Reported Course Impact on the Student.
Alternate and Supplementary Teaching/Learning Environments.
15. Commercially Available Student Rating Forms.
Checklist for Identifying and Selecting Published Forms.
Review of Selected Published or Commercially Available Student Rating Forms.
Aleamoni Course/Instructor Evaluation Questionnaire (CIEQ).
IDEA Student Ratings of Instruction.
Student Instructional Report II (SIR II).
References.
16. Case Studies and Sample Faculty Evaluation Manuals.
Frostburg State University Case Study.
Frostburg State University Faculty Evaluation System.
Georgia Perimeter College Faculty Evaluation System.
Fairmont State University Case Study.
References.
Bibliography.
Index.
Raoul A. Arreola received his Ph.D. in educational
psychology from Arizona State University in 1969, specializing in
educational research and measurement. He has taught in the areas of
statistics, educational psychology, personnel educational, and
educational leadership, and has held a number of faculty and
administrative positions involving assessment, strategic planning,
faculty evaluation , and faculty development. These positions
include director of the Office of Evaluation Services, associate
director of the Learning Systems Institute, and associate professor
of educational research and measurement at Florida State
University, director of the Center for Instructional Services and
research and professor of educational psychology at the University
of Memphis; and professor and chair of the Department of Education,
assistant dean for assessment and planning, director of educational
technology, and director of institutional research, assessment, and
planning at the University of Tennessee Health Service Center. Dr.
Arreola currently serves as director of assessment and professor of
pharmaceutical sciences in the College of Pharmacy at the
University of Tennessee Health Science Center.
Dr. Arreola has worked and published in the field of faculty
evaluation and development for 36 years and has served as a
consultant nationally and internationally to more than 250 colleges
and universities in designing and operating faculty evaluation and
development programs. He has also served as a consultant to the
U.S. Department of labor and the Florida House of Representatives
on designing and evaluating professional and occupational licensing
examination procedures. He is president of his own consulting firm,
the Center for Educational Development and Evaluation (CEDA), which
offers consulting and national workshops on developing and
assessing faculty performance. These workshops have been attended
by thousands of faculty and administrators from more than 500
college and universities.
In 2004 Dr. Arreola was presented with the McKeachie Career
Achievement Award by the Special Interest group of faculty teaching
Evaluation, and Development of the American Educational Research
Association for his contributions to the field of assessing and
developing faculty performance. In 2005 the American Educational
Research Association presented him with the prestigious
Interpretive Scholarship Award in recognition for his work in
developing the meta-profession model of the professoriate, which
underpins the processes described in this volume.
Raoul Arreola is married to Dr. Mona J. Arreola, associate director
of the cancer center of St. Jude Children’s Research hospital. They
have four grown children and nine grandchildren (so far).
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