1. Peer Observation Purpose
Faculty at CWI are committed to teaching excellence, and faculty peer observation is a valuable method for purposeful engagement in continuous improvement of teaching. The peer observation process is an opportunity for the observed and observer to learn from one another and share ideas, experience, philosophies, strategies, and resources. The process is to be formative and collegial in nature, rather than evaluative.
2. Peer Observation Standards
The peer observation process has standards that all faculty must adhere to. There are, however, some standards that are tailorable by department, which are noted below.
3. Procedure.
The peer observation process consists of a faculty member being observed at least once and doing an observation at least once. The process must meet the standards described below, and the process must follow the procedure that was approved by Faculty Senate, appropriately customized by the department, and provided through the Faculty Evaluation Repository.
4. Frequency.
At minimum, faculty must participate in the peer review process, including doing an observation and being observed, with the following frequency:
Departments will more narrowly define frequency expectations for themselves. Below are example models for frequency.
5. Deliverables
6. Observations
Observations should be focused on pedagogy rather than solely on course content; as a result, there is a great deal of flexibility regarding who may be observed. Departments may set limitations on or set goals for who should be observed. Below are some of the populations it may benefit faculty to observe.
7. Arrangement of Observations
Department chairs or their designees will assume responsibility for connecting observers to people to be observed. Faculty may request to assume responsibility for arranging to be observed and/or do an observation. Departments will provide information on the exact procedure they expect their faculty to use.
8. Length of Observation
The observation should last roughly the same period as 1 credit hour’s time, 50 minutes. This observation work may be completed synchronously, asynchronously, or any combination of the two. This 50 minutes' worth of work may include observation of course materials, lecture, lab, online course, etc.
9. Elements of Course Observed
The observer and observed must agree to the portions of the course that will be observed. Observations should be focused on pedagogy rather than solely on course content.
10. Required Meeting
The observed and observer are required to meet after the observation to discuss the observation. The meeting should be roughly 30 minutes.
11. Burden Limitation
Faculty may be asked to participate in peer observation more frequently than required. Faculty are not required to participate more frequently than the standard set by the department. However, faculty are encouraged to participate as often as they would like and that their schedule reasonably allows
12. Communication of Department Tailored Standards
The decisions made by departments on frequency, who may be observed, and how observations will be arranged must be posted in the Faculty Evaluation Repository Peer Observation section using the Department Standards for Peer Observation form. The notification needs to include the decision, the dates decisions were made, and the date the decision will be reviewed again.