探花视频

Feedback on feedback

Published on
October 3, 2013
Last updated
May 22, 2015

Anthony Seldon (鈥Right to reply鈥, Opinion, 19 September) declares that university teaching can be improved through student feedback appraisals. Yet this reverses the normal teacher-student relationship, which assumes the mastery of the teacher, not the student. To听appraise the quality of teaching properly, the student would need a greater understanding of the subject than the teacher: an unlikely scenario.

Seldon rather impertinently assumes that 鈥渨e鈥 (teachers) (but not himself) do not sufficiently reflect upon performance. But we know, often by intuition, whether our ideas 鈥済o鈥, aren鈥檛 really understood or arouse resistance 鈥 a natural process more immediate and valuable than formal feedback.

He also assumes that any failure by the听student to grasp what they are taught inevitably is the fault of unsatisfactory communication by the teacher. This leaves no听room for more abstruse types of knowledge barely within the student鈥檚 mental range. Should any teacher be penalised on the grounds that they are duty-bound to 鈥渃ommunicate鈥, no matter how difficult the subject matter?

A fundamental question not addressed by Seldon is this: what should be assessed? If classroom doors are 鈥減ermanently open鈥 to assessors, the basic teacher-student relationship is undermined and the teacher is required to address (鈥渢each鈥) the assessor rather than the student. Hence in truth, teaching is not being assessed at all.

The kinds of demands for appraisal made by听Seldon are far from new and seem inspired by motives that have nothing to do with improving education: allowing non-teachers to听assume control of the classroom and learning the secret of 鈥済ood鈥 teaching in order听to 鈥渋ndustrialise鈥 it.

Nigel Probert
Porthmadog

Anthony Seldon argues that student feedback should play a greater role in the assessment of听academic teaching. This is surely an idea whose time has come. At the end of each lecture, students could vote it a 鈥渉it鈥 or a 鈥渕iss鈥, Juke Box Jury-style. If the latter, the lecturer could exit via a trapdoor in the floor of听the lecture room.

Keith Flett
London

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