Students who want to let rip at their lecturers in anonymous feedback forms should remember one thing before they start: their tutors will probably know who they are.
That was the warning from Darren Reid, senior lecturer in history at Coventry University, who reminded his class that it was fairly easy to work out who had made certain comments if they were âhighly consistent with your speaking patternâ and âopinionsâ expressed in seminars.
In an email to students that was passed to Times Higher Education, Dr Reid urges them ânot to assume that a nameless form grants you complete anonymityâ, adding that âsome of you think you are better at hiding your identity than you are in realityâ.
âPatterns of identityâ such as non-attendance and a âfew other tellsâ mean that students often âeffectively de-anonymise[d]â themselves, he adds.
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Dr Reid says that his âlast lessonâ to his third-year students is meant âin the spirit of supportâ to help them âafter graduation [and] in the job marketâ, adding that âyou have absolutely nothing to worry about from meâ.
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However, one student, who did not wish to be identified, told THE that he believed the message was designed to make some students âfeel badâ and âworry them [by implying that he knew] who is responsible for each element of the feedbackâ.
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Dr Reidâs seven-page response to various positive and negative comments that he had received, which was attached to the email, was also criticised by the student.
The complaint is likely to stoke debate about universitiesâ use of anonymous student feedback, which, along with student satisfaction surveys, has increasingly been seen as a proxy for teaching quality. However, some lecturers have complained that they tend to generate unfair, unconstructive and sometimes abusive comments that unduly affect careers.
In the case of Dr Reid, he tells students that he was âextremely flattered and gratifiedâ by the feedback that he received and that the comments, and 94 per cent satisfaction level, had âmade my dayâ.
In a statement, Dr Reid told THE that he wrote the email because it was âvery important to discuss with students how the nature of anonymity continues to change in the digital landscape that we live in and which appears (but often fails) to protect oneâs privacyâ.
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âWe have a responsibility to make sure our students understand that perceived anonymity is not the same as actual anonymity â at university, the workplace and online,â he said, adding that âdata which we assume to be safe or private has been repeatedly shown to be anything butâ.
âI was simply offering constructive advice pertinent in the age of internet âprivacyâ â nothing more, nothing less,â he said.
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:Â Your feedback betrays you
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