TY - JOUR
T1 - Questionnaires as interventions
T2 - can taking a survey increase teachers’ openness to student feedback surveys?
AU - Gehlbach, Hunter
AU - Robinson, Carly D.
AU - Finefter-Rosenbluh, Ilana
AU - Benshoof, Chris
AU - Schneider, Jack
PY - 2018/3/16
Y1 - 2018/3/16
N2 - Administrators often struggle in getting teachers to trust their school’s evaluation practices–a necessity if teachers are to learn from the feedback they receive. We attempted to bolster teachers’ support for receiving evaluative feedback from a particularly controversial source: student-perception surveys. For our intervention, we took one of two approaches to asking 309 teachers how they felt about students evaluating their teaching practice. Control participants responded only to core questions regarding their attitudes towards student-perception surveys. Meanwhile, treatment participants were first asked whether teachers should evaluate administrators in performance reviews and were then asked the core items about student-perception surveys. Congruent with cognitive dissonance theory, this juxtaposition of questions bolstered treatment teachers’ support for using student surveys in teacher evaluations relative to the control group. We discuss the implications of these findings with respect to increasing teacher openness to alternative evaluation approaches, and consider whether surveys show promise as a vehicle for delivering interventions.
AB - Administrators often struggle in getting teachers to trust their school’s evaluation practices–a necessity if teachers are to learn from the feedback they receive. We attempted to bolster teachers’ support for receiving evaluative feedback from a particularly controversial source: student-perception surveys. For our intervention, we took one of two approaches to asking 309 teachers how they felt about students evaluating their teaching practice. Control participants responded only to core questions regarding their attitudes towards student-perception surveys. Meanwhile, treatment participants were first asked whether teachers should evaluate administrators in performance reviews and were then asked the core items about student-perception surveys. Congruent with cognitive dissonance theory, this juxtaposition of questions bolstered treatment teachers’ support for using student surveys in teacher evaluations relative to the control group. We discuss the implications of these findings with respect to increasing teacher openness to alternative evaluation approaches, and consider whether surveys show promise as a vehicle for delivering interventions.
KW - Brief interventions
KW - cognitive dissonance
KW - questionnaire
KW - student feedback surveys
KW - teacher assessment
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85025841871&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/01443410.2017.1349876
DO - 10.1080/01443410.2017.1349876
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85025841871
SN - 0144-3410
VL - 38
SP - 350
EP - 367
JO - Educational Psychology
JF - Educational Psychology
IS - 3
ER -