Web Survey Bibliography
Business professors were surveyed to determine their attitudes towards two methods of collecting students' teaching evaluations of faculty—the traditional paper-and-pencil method conducted in class and the online method conducted via the Internet. Faculty preferred the traditional paper method, mainly because they believed it would produce a higher and more accurate response than the online method. Faculty characteristics were examined to determine whether they were related to attitudes towards the online method of collecting teaching evaluations. No characteristics were found to be significantly associated with attitudes towards the online method. Suggestions for future researchers are offered.
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Web survey bibliography - Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education (6)
- Can we augment web responses with telephonic responses to a graduate destination survey?; 2015; du Toit, J.
- Web-based versus paper-based data collection for the evaluation of teaching activity: empirical evidence...; 2010; Lalla, M., Ferrari, D.
- A recipe for effective participation rates for web-based surveys ; 2009; Bennett, L., Nair, C. S.
- The adequacy of response rates to online and paper surveys: what can be done?; 2008; Nulty, D. D.
- Gathering faculty teaching evaluations by in-class and online surveys: their effects on response rates...; 2004; Dommeyer, C. J., Baum, P., Hanna, R. W., Chapman, K. S.
- Attitudes of Business Faculty Towards Two Methods of Collecting Teaching Evaluations: Paper vs. Online...; 2002; Dommeyer, C. J., Baum, P., Chapman, K. S., Hanna, R. W.