1. Paired peer review of university classroom teaching in a school of nursing and midwifery
- Author
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Paul Bennett, Steve Parker, Heather Smigiel, Bennett, Paul N, Parker, Steve, and Smigiel, Heather
- Subjects
Paper ,Classroom teaching ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Higher education ,Schools, Nursing ,MEDLINE ,Nursing Methodology Research ,Midwifery ,Education ,nursing ,Nursing ,Pregnancy ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Humans ,Web application ,Medicine ,Education, Nursing ,book ,General Nursing ,Internet ,Peer feedback ,business.industry ,Obstetrics ,Teaching ,Australia ,teaching ,Nursing standard ,Nursing Education Research ,Quality of teaching ,Nursing Evaluation Research ,higher education ,book.journal ,Female ,The Internet ,internet ,business - Abstract
Background: Peer review of university classroom teaching can increase the quality of teaching but is not universally practiced in Australian universities. Aim: To report an evaluation of paired peer-review process using both paper and web based teaching evaluation tools. Methods: Twenty university teachers in one metropolitan Australian School of Nursing and Midwifery were randomly paired and then randomly assigned to a paper based or web-based peer review tool. Each teacher reviewed each other's classroom teaching as part of a peer review program. The participants then completed an 18 question survey evaluating the peer review tool and paired evaluation process. Responses were analyzed using frequencies and percentages. Results: Regardless of the tool used, participants found this process of peer review positive (75%), collegial (78%), supportive (61%) and non-threatening (71%). Participants reported that the peer review will improve their own classroom delivery (61%), teaching evaluation (61%) and planning (53%). The web-based tool was found to be easier to use and allowed more space than the paper-based tool. Conclusion: Implementation of a web-based paired peer review system can be a positive method of peer review of university classroom teaching. Pairing of teachers to review each other's classroom teaching is a promising strategy and has the potential to improve teaching in teaching universities. Refereed/Peer-reviewed
- Published
- 2012