Treischl E, Wolbring T (2017)
Publication Language: English
Publication Type: Journal article, Original article
Publication year: 2017
Book Volume: 58
Pages Range: 904–921
Journal Issue: 8
DOI: 10.1007/s11162-017-9452-4
	In recent years many universities switched from paper- to online-based student
	evaluation of teaching (SET) without knowing the consequences for data quality. Based on
	a series of three consecutive field experiments—a split-half design, twin courses, and pre–
	post-measurements—this paper examines the effects of survey mode on SET. First, all
	three studies reveal marked differences in non-response between online- and paper-based
	SET and systematic, but small differences in the overall course ratings. On average, online
	SET reveal a slightly less optimistic picture of teaching quality in students’ perception.
	Similarly, a web survey mode does not impair the reliability of student ratings. Second, we
	highlight the importance of taking selection and class absenteeism into account when
	studying survey mode effects and also show that it is necessary and informative to survey
	the subgroup of no-shows when evaluating teaching. Third, we empirically demonstrate the
	need to account for contextual setting of the survey (in class vs. after class) and the specific
	type of the online survey mode (TAN vs. email). Previous research either confounded
	contextual setting with variation in survey mode or generalized results for a specific online
	mode to web surveys in general. Our findings suggest that higher response rates in email
	surveys can be achieved if students are given the opportunity and time to evaluate directly
	in class.
APA:
Treischl, E., & Wolbring, T. (2017). The Causal Effect of Survey Mode on Students’ Evaluations of Teaching: Empirical Evidence from Three Field Experiments. Research in Higher Education, 58(8), 904–921. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11162-017-9452-4
MLA:
Treischl, Edgar, and Tobias Wolbring. "The Causal Effect of Survey Mode on Students’ Evaluations of Teaching: Empirical Evidence from Three Field Experiments." Research in Higher Education 58.8 (2017): 904–921.
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