University of Wollongong
Browse

Maximising resource allocation in the teaching laboratory: understanding student evaluations of teaching assistants in a team-based teaching format

Download (749.69 kB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-15, 09:36 authored by Sasha NikolicSasha Nikolic, Thomas SuesseThomas Suesse, Timothy McCarthyTimothy McCarthy, Thomas Goldfinch
Minimal research papers have investigated the use of student evaluations on the laboratory, a learning medium usually run by teaching assistants with little control of the content, delivery and equipment. Finding the right mix of teaching assistants for the laboratory can be an onerous task due to the many skills required including theoretical and practical know-how, troubleshooting, safety and class management. Using larger classes with multiple teaching assistants, a team-based teaching (TBT) format may be advantageous. A rigorous three-year study across twenty-five courses over repetitive laboratory classes is analysed using a multi-level statistical model considering students, laboratory classes and courses. The study is used to investigate the effectiveness of the TBT format, and quantify the influence each demonstrator has on the laboratory experience. The study found that TBT is effective and the lead demonstrator most influential, influencing up to 55% of the laboratory experience evaluation.

History

Citation

S. Nikolic, T. F. Suesse, T. J. McCarthy & T. L. Goldfinch, "Maximising resource allocation in the teaching laboratory: understanding student evaluations of teaching assistants in a team-based teaching format," European Journal of Engineering Education, vol. 42, (6) pp. 1277-1295, 2017.

Journal title

European Journal of Engineering Education

Volume

42

Issue

6

Pagination

1277-1295

Language

English

RIS ID

112510

Usage metrics

    Categories

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC