4.4 Article

Reciprocity in college teaching: a big data study based on online student evaluation of 919,750 professors

Journal

ASSESSMENT & EVALUATION IN HIGHER EDUCATION
Volume 47, Issue 8, Pages 1401-1415

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/02602938.2022.2067980

Keywords

Student evaluation; reciprocity; ratemyprofessor; com; college teaching

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [T2192931, 32071075]
  2. Development Grant for Excellent Undergraduate Course of Beijing and Planning Subject for the 13th Five Year Plan of National Science of Education the Key Research Topics of the Ministry of Education [DIA170384]

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This study explores the existence and extent of reciprocity in college teaching, with a dataset from ratemyprofessor.com. The results indicate that reciprocity exists in different forms to varying degrees, with teaching style being beneficial for the shift from a teacher-centered approach to a student-centered approach, while reciprocity in grading and course difficulty may impair teaching effectiveness.
Reciprocity is a potential issue in college teaching if professors benefit students in return for better student evaluation results. The reciprocity in college teaching is framed as kind intention and consequence, including teaching styles, attendance requirement, delivery mode, grading and course difficulty. This study explored whether and to what extent reciprocity exists in these forms. A dataset containing 9,543,998 records on 919,750 professors from ratemyprofessor.com was used. The results show that reciprocity exists in the five forms to different extents. The reciprocity in attendance requirement and delivery mode is relatively minor. We suggest that the reciprocity in teaching styles is instrumental to the transformation from the teacher-centred approach to the student-centered approach, that professors need not feel pressured to change courses into attendance-flexible or in-person courses, and that the reciprocity in grading and course difficulty may cause goal displacement and impair teaching effectiveness.

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