2013
DOI: 10.1016/j.jaccedu.2013.03.002
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The medium is the message: Comparing paper-based and web-based course evaluation modalities

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Cited by 8 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…Researchers refer to course evaluations in a variety of ways, including student evaluation of teaching (SET) (Fogarty et al, 2013;Reisenwitz, 2015); end-of-course evaluations (EOCE) (Jaquett, et al,2017;Marks et al, 2017); end-of-course critiques (EOCC) (Morrison, 2011) or course evaluations (Kuch & Roberts, 2018;Perrett, 2013). Throughout this paper, we use the term course evaluation to describe the process of garnering student-provided feedback (paper-pencil or online) at the end of a term.…”
Section: Course Evaluationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Researchers refer to course evaluations in a variety of ways, including student evaluation of teaching (SET) (Fogarty et al, 2013;Reisenwitz, 2015); end-of-course evaluations (EOCE) (Jaquett, et al,2017;Marks et al, 2017); end-of-course critiques (EOCC) (Morrison, 2011) or course evaluations (Kuch & Roberts, 2018;Perrett, 2013). Throughout this paper, we use the term course evaluation to describe the process of garnering student-provided feedback (paper-pencil or online) at the end of a term.…”
Section: Course Evaluationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Literature suggests that the practice of post-secondary institutions collecting student feedback via course evaluations dates back to the early 1970s (Fogarty et al, 2013;Wallace et al, 2019). The traditional methods for collecting student feedback involved paper-pen surveys, typically administered during class time towards the end of a course by instructors/professors or administrative faculty.…”
Section: Evolution Of Course Evaluationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, experimental studies comparing the degree of impression management or studying social desirability effects inferred from other self-reports could not unequivocally confirm this effect. Some authors observed increased self-disclosure when surveys were administered over the Internet, whereas others found only small or even null effects (e.g., Carlbring et al, 2007; Fogarty, Jonas, & Parker, 2013; Risko, Quilty, & Oakman, 2006). For example, students evaluate instructors and their courses more critically in web-based as compared with paper-and-pencil questionnaires (Fogarty et al, 2013), and people also report slightly higher levels of depression on the Internet (Carlbring et al, 2007), whereas Risko et al (2006) found no evidence of such mode differences for various measures of social desirability.…”
Section: Mode Effects and Social Desirabilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…"Significantly lower evaluation scores for both the instructor and the course are produced when a web-based modality is used. In general, these results did not vary for courses at different levels of matriculation or at different levels of student participation" [13]…”
Section: Examples Of Research On Student Evaluation Of Teaching (Set)mentioning
confidence: 88%