An Australian university has been given the green light to publish student course evaluation data, despite concerns that the information can be used to âreverse engineerâ staff league tables.
UNSW Sydney has successfully appealed a decision from Australiaâs industrial relations umpire, the Fair Work Commission (FWC), banning it from giving students broad access to data compiled from quantitative course ratings.
The information includes studentsâ appraisals of course quality, resources, assessment and feedback on a six-point scale. UNSW says it does not intend to publish studentsâ qualitative commentary about the courses or their evaluations of teachers.
The university only plans to publish quantitative data on courses that involve more than one teacher â so that individual staff cannot be directly identified â and where at least 10 responses have been received, so that aberrant assessments cannot unduly influence the data.
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But the National Tertiary Education Union (NTEU) said that the information allowed individual staff to be identified by academics in the same discipline or school, and â in cases where courses were taught by pairs of tenured and casual staff â by academics across the university.
âThis is a public university, not a reality TV show,â the unionâs New South Wales branch tweeted on the eve of a FWC hearing in August.
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FWC commissioner Leigh Johns sided with the union. He dismissed the universityâs argument that the dataâs publication did not directly identify staff because âdetective work and additional effortâ was needed to match courses to teachers.
But an FWC appeals panel has  that decision, finding that the universityâs plans comply with a strict reading of the enterprise agreement.
âWe accept that in some cases a person can be identified without being named,â the 7 March judgment says. âA reference to [an] attribute could identify the person, even though the personâs name might not be used. But the proposed form of the data to be published simply does not do this. No staff are identified.â
UNSW believes that publishing the data will convince students that their feedback is being âconsidered and utilisedâ, encouraging more of them to fill out course evaluation surveys and improving the questionnairesâ response rates and accuracy. âOur studentsâŠtake such care in providing all this feedback,â said deputy vice-chancellor Merlin Crossley.
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âThis gives us an opportunity to celebrate and showcase many courses that provide an outstanding student experience, and work with staff to develop courses that still need work.â
But NTEU state secretary Damien Cahill said that the âvery disappointingâ ruling potentially sent a signal to managers at other universities who âwant to use these surveys as performance metricsâ.
Dr Cahill said student evaluations were useful for teacher and course development when they were âframed and conductedâ properly. âBut thereâs a lot of scholarly literature onâŠthe inherent gender and racial biases [and] limitations based on the context. Whether a course was online, the time of day, the room in which it was held, the dynamics of the cohort of students â all of those situational factors play a role in determining the outcome of those evaluations.â
In the , published in the Journal of University Teaching & Learning Practice, a Victoria University analysis of more than 22,000 studentsâ teaching evaluations found no differences in the score ratings for teacher gender. But male studentsâ commentary about the teaching style of female academics became increasingly negative during Covid-related lockdowns.
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