Teaching feedback

While self-analysis can help to develop us as teachers, external feedback is essential to make us more aware of what we are doing well and what we could do differently or better. In general, teaching feedback can come from the following sources:

Your Course or GA Coordinator

You can ask your course or GA Coordinator for feedback on your performance at any time during the course or after the course. At the end of your TA or GA position, your coordinator will be submitting a TA Evaluation. Numeric data from the evaluation are available on request from the TA Coordinator.

Your students

GIs receive feedback from their students through online course evaluation forms which are made available toward the end of term. Currently, TAs teaching in online courses do not receive individual course evaluations from their students, but students do fill out an online evaluation form for the course as a whole. The online evaluations, which are available to the course coordinator only, generally don't provide much information on individual TA performance, but you can ask your course coordinator for any student feedback that might pertain to you.

For GIs, it may also be helpful to create ways in which students can submit ongoing course feedback or to have students do a mid-term course evaluation so that you can make adjustments mid-way through your course to better meet their needs. See the CTE’s Using mid-term student feedback for guidelines for creating and administering your own mid-term evaluations.

The TA or GI Coordinator or other faculty member

If you are a GI, you can ask the TA or GI Coordinator or another faculty member such as your dissertation supervisor to observe either your class or your online interactions with students. The purpose of this observation is to provide formative feedback that will help in your development as a teacher. The observer will discuss with you what specific elements of your teaching you would like comments on and what date and time would be best for your observation.

The observer may stay for an entire class or only a part of it. You can request written feedback from the observation, which can then be placed in your teaching file. Either you or the observer may also request a meeting to discuss the feedback.

The Centre for Teaching Excellence (CTE)

You can contact the CTE to arrange for somebody to visit your class and give you teaching feedback. Contact Victoria Feth, the teaching liaison for the Faculty of Arts, for more information. The CTE's Fundamentals of University Teaching and Certificate in University Teaching also include feedback from peers and CTE staff.

Peers

To get another perspective on your teaching performance, you could invite a fellow GI or TA to drop in and observe your class. See the CTE’s Peer review of teaching guidelines for information on making the most of peer feedback.