Monday, September 6, 2010

“A FRACTURED, SEMI-FACTUAL HISTORY OF STUDENT RATINGS OF TEACHING: A Parody!”

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WARNING: This new blog series contains buckets of humor, which may not be suitable for all readers. If you have the sense of humor of an avocado or, even worse, a cumquat, this parody is not for you, despite its trailblazing, earth-shattering, Pulitzer Prize-caliber contribution to the teaching evaluation literature. If you fit this description, Buhbye!

ANOTHER BORING HISTORY?
Usually the history of any serious topic triggers the gag reflex in most nonhistorians. However, this topic is different from most. Over the past year, there have been incendiary debates over student rating forms, online administration procedures, and their use and interpretation on several professional listservs, LinkedIn groups, professional blogs, and other electronic and walkie-talkie communications. The reverberations of these debates have been felt on college campuses as far away as Pandora University, where the topic has provoked the verbal equivalent of the Avatar-scale firefight. Rather than fan the flames of this combustible metaphor, I thought this blog series might provide a time-out, refreshing break on this contentious topic, while also shedding some energy-saving light on how this situation evolved.

FRACTURED, BUT FACTUAL TOO!
Do any of you remember “Fractured Fairy Tales” on The Rocky and Bullwinkle Show? “NO!” What about Boris and Natasha? What were you doing? Oh well, it doesn’t matter, youngin’ academic readers. These blogs are written in the same spirit as that cult, politically-satirical cartoon, just without the cult, politics, and cartoon. It is a parody with the bonus of actual events in the history of student ratings. You’ll get a few morsels of content within a humor context. (FACT ALERT: Most of the names, dates, book and scale titles, and survey statistics are correct.)

TWO READER OUTCOMES:
There are two primary outcomes of this series for you:

1. to get a handle on the significant academic activities, research, and major players in the unfolding of the student ratings debate, and
2. to elicit a chuckle or two, maybe a guffaw, in that process.

If you laugh at any time during this series, I hope you will experience one of these physical signs:

a. burst your guts,
b. rupture key internal organs,
c. wet yourself, or
d. spurt your latté or green tea through your nostrils all over your keyboard.

Anything less will be disappointing. (NOTE: Most of the references along my historical path have been omitted to permit more space for jokes. Please refer to my Thirteen Strategies… book for those references and lots more jokes.)

My next blog will begin our historical journey with an overview of the state of the art of student ratings. Hold onto your guts.

COPYRIGHT © 2010 Ronald A. Berk, LLC

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