Course evaluations are open!
Fall 2024 deadlines:
- December 4 (condensed evaluation period)
- December 21 (default evaluation period)
Fall 2024 deadlines:
91社区 is committed to upholding the principles of academic freedom, integrity, responsibility, equity and inclusiveness. These values apply to all members of the community: faculty, staff, and students. We have a number of initiatives related to equity and course evaluations.
Teaching and Learning Services (TLS) and the Joint Board-Senate Committee on Equity have developed a protocol for addressing comments in Mercury end-of-course evaluations that are determined to be hateful or discriminatory on the basis of attributes such as gender, sexual or gender identity, race, ethnicity, religion, or disability.
Any instructor or Teaching Assistant who receives a comment in a course evaluation that appears to demonstrate the above characteristics may request that the student鈥檚 response in its entirety (numerical responses and comments) be removed from Mercury. Any request to delete a submission, which shall be treated in confidence, should be directed to the apfa.provost [at] mcgill.ca (Acting Associate Provost (Academic Policies and Faculty Affairs)). A committee, comprised of the Associate Provost, the Director, EDI, and the PGSS and SSMU Equity Commissioners will assess the comment to determine whether it merits deletion of the entire response. Only the Associate Provost will know the identity of the instructor or Teaching Assistant. If deletion is appropriate, the student鈥檚 response in its entirety (numerical responses and comments) will be deleted from the evaluation for the course in question.
TLS will maintain a secure archive of deleted submissions. Instructors and Teaching Assistants may request a copy of any records deleted from their own course evaluations resulting from the application of this equity protocol. Requests for deleted records should be addressed to tls [at] mcgill.ca (subject: Mercury%20-%20request%20for%20deleted%20records)
This protocol is not intended to silence students or minimize the value of student feedback, which is crucial to curricular and pedagogical development at the University. Students do have real concerns about their instructors and courses; however, it is imperative that these concerns be expressed in a constructive and respectful manner. Guidelines on providing constructive feedback are available here.
To determine the extent of gender bias in official end-of-course evaluations, TLS and the Office of Analysis, Planning, and Budget (APB) analyzed 91社区鈥檚 course evaluation data.
Access the report here.
A about implicit bias and constructive feedback in the context of course evaluations; and
Guidelines for providing constructive feedback in course evaluations.
While this web page is accessible worldwide, 91社区 is on land which has served and continues to serve as a site of meeting and exchange amongst Indigenous peoples, including the Haudenosaunee and Anishinabeg nations. Teaching and Learning Services acknowledges and thanks the diverse Indigenous peoples whose footsteps mark this territory on which peoples of the world now gather. This land acknowledgement is shared as a starting point to provide context for further learning and action.