TOE TIG Week: Applying progressive pedagogy to how I teach evaluation by Dana Wanzer

Greetings from the land of the Anishinaabe and Sioux people, referred to by colonizers as Menomonie, WI. My name is Dana Wanzer, PhD, and I teach evaluation in our MS in Applied Psychology program at University of Wisconsin-Stout. Today I’m sharing with you why and how I shifted my approach to teaching during the past year.

As COVID-19 shifted instruction online and as I committed more deeply toward challenging the white supremacy inherent in our society, I had to fundamentally rethink how I taught all my courses. Students were overwhelmed with the transition to online education, with the public health crisis that stifled physical interaction, and with the social and racial justice movements.

My first fundamental shift was on course policies and expectations, emphasizing care and compassion for my students. I removed my late policy, allowing students to turn in nearly any assignment at any point during the semester with no penalty. I removed policing mechanisms from my course including attendance policies, camera usage policies, and proctoring software. I revised my syllabus to use more welcoming and inclusive language, shifting the syllabus from a contractual-type document to an invitation to the course and resource for students.

My second fundamental shift was in my curriculum. I began reading more and more about white supremacy, structural racism, social justice, and more, thinking critically about how I could incorporate this into the curriculum. I audited the readings in my evaluation course to ensure readings from a variety of authors across gender, race/ethnicity, and nation. I recommend Evaluation in Today’s World by Campbell & Thomas for folks interested in a textbook that integrates a social justice, diversity, and inclusion lens to evaluation throughout every chapter.

My third fundamental shift was in my pedagogy. I fully flipped my courses so class time is spent applying, analyzing, evaluating, and creating in group settings with instructor facilitation and support. I better implemented principles of universal-design for learning and trauma-informed pedagogy into my courses. I began using software like Perusall to help students with course readings, and jamovi as a free, open-source, easy-to-use alternative to SPSS.

I soon realized my pedagogy was fully aligned with progressive education pedagogies that involve critical pedagogy, experiential learning, and inclusive spaces. This led me to my fourth fundamental shift, in my assessment and evaluation. I have begun exploring alternative grading mechanisms, including ungrading, which I argue aligns more with how we approach our practice as evaluators.  

“To teach in a manner that respects and cares for the souls of our students is essential if we are to provide the necessary conditions where learning can most deeply and intimately begin.” – bell hooks, Teaching to Transgress, p. 13

The American Evaluation Association is celebrating TOE TIG Week with our colleagues in the Teaching of Evaluation Topical Interest Group. The contributions all this week to aea365 come from our TOE TIG members. Do you have questions, concerns, kudos, or content to extend this aea365 contribution? Please add them in the comments section for this post on the aea365 webpage so that we may enrich our community of practice. Would you like to submit an aea365 Tip? Please send a note of interest to aea365@eval.org. aea365 is sponsored by the American Evaluation Association and provides a Tip-a-Day by and for evaluators. The views and opinions expressed on the AEA365 blog are solely those of the original authors and other contributors. These views and opinions do not necessarily represent those of the American Evaluation Association, and/or any/all contributors to this site.

1 thought on “TOE TIG Week: Applying progressive pedagogy to how I teach evaluation by Dana Wanzer”

  1. I find it honorable and intriguing that you have made this shift towards teaching evaluation through a lens of equity and social justice. It is so important that evaluators keep in mind these principles because they themselves are responsible for impacting programs that are designed to improve conditions for marginalized individuals; it makes perfect sense. Also, your reference of progressive education really caught my eye. One of the ideas within the recourse that you linked to was to change education to be cooperative rather than competitive (webflow.com). We are seeing this change in thinking in many countries right now as we are scrambling to find new ways to educate the next generation with skills to solve modern day problems. This is the case across all subject matter including math, science, engineering, and evaluation. I teach in British Columbia, have a look at the curricular competencies in our curriculum, they align exactly with your philosophy (Curriculum | Building Student Success – B.C. Curriculum (gov.bc.ca).

    I wanted to say how impressed I am that you have made this commitment to changing your program to better align with these concepts. No doubt, you are in the minority as most higher education systems are clinging to maintain status quo, power imbalance and an awkward competitive landscape that has students jumping through hoops instead of forming a meaningful connection to their own learning.

    Thanks for sharing your post.

    Corey

    5f905f7f70e83b7477f4c5a5_HRP-Primer_V1.2.pdf (webflow.com)

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