1971
DOI: 10.1037/h0030763
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Student evaluations of teacher behaviors as estimations of real-ideal discrepancies: A critique of teacher rating methods.

Abstract: Ratings imply comparative judgments between the values of the observer and his observations, for instance, a student's ratings of his teacher are estimates of the discrepancy between the student's ideals for the teacher's behavior and what he sees the teacher do. However, most methods for collecting teacher ratings make assumptions about ideals and about the discrepancies between ideals and observed behavior. In order to assess the relevance of direct measurement of ideals, students were asked to rate a teache… Show more

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Cited by 14 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Blai (1971) and Levinthal et al (1971) state that one problem with student evaluations is that they make assumptions regarding the student's ideals. Student ratings are actually a discrepancy between the student's ideals for the instructor's behavior and how the instructor actually behaves.…”
Section: Adult Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Blai (1971) and Levinthal et al (1971) state that one problem with student evaluations is that they make assumptions regarding the student's ideals. Student ratings are actually a discrepancy between the student's ideals for the instructor's behavior and how the instructor actually behaves.…”
Section: Adult Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Student ratings are actually a discrepancy between the student's ideals for the instructor's behavior and how the instructor actually behaves. Knowing this, it is impossible to compare ratings between students because each student may have a different &dquo;ideal.&dquo; In an attempt to improve the accuracy of student evaluation Levinthal et al (1971) suggest using a two-scale rating format. One scale would look at student preferences, the other at student observations.…”
Section: Adult Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…It has been suggested that such information is insufficient because it fails to identify the referent (standard) by which the evaluator arrives at his or her rating (Levinthal, Lansky, & Andrews, 1971;Sanders & Lynch, Note 9). The argument is that the interpretation of the ratings may take on a completely different meaning if it is done in the light of a perceived ideal rather than on the basis of actual performance alone.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Students differ in their conceptions of ideal teaching (Levinthal et al, 1971). They are almost equally likely to evaluate their instructor's performance in relation to their perceptions of an ideal instructor, other instructors in the department, other instructors in different departments, and what they perceive to be their instructor's potential (Gmelch,Note 1).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%