TY - JOUR
T1 - ‘Teaching shouldn’t feel like a combat sport’
T2 - how teaching evaluations are weaponised against minoritised academics
AU - Gatwiri, Kathomi
AU - Anderson, Leticia
AU - Townsend-Cross, Marcelle
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - In the Australian Higher Education sector, the gendered, racialised, and heteronormative culture of neoliberalism means that for minoritised teachers the university classroom is always a contested, and often hostile, space. Our gendered and racialised bodies become objects under the gaze of our students and the deafening headwinds of post-truth anti-intellectualism render our stories difficult for our students to hear. This paper probes our experiences as minoritised educators who through a decolonial framework, actively challenge deeply entrenched narratives through critical teaching and consider how that translates into student feedback. We employ a collaborative autoethnographic approach to offer an understanding of how Student Evaluations of Teaching (SETs) are used as a tool of disciplinary control in the neoliberalised university. We argue that SETs are racialised and gendered tools of power that can be hostile and biased towards minoritised teachers, and urge reconsideration of their overuse in higher education.
AB - In the Australian Higher Education sector, the gendered, racialised, and heteronormative culture of neoliberalism means that for minoritised teachers the university classroom is always a contested, and often hostile, space. Our gendered and racialised bodies become objects under the gaze of our students and the deafening headwinds of post-truth anti-intellectualism render our stories difficult for our students to hear. This paper probes our experiences as minoritised educators who through a decolonial framework, actively challenge deeply entrenched narratives through critical teaching and consider how that translates into student feedback. We employ a collaborative autoethnographic approach to offer an understanding of how Student Evaluations of Teaching (SETs) are used as a tool of disciplinary control in the neoliberalised university. We argue that SETs are racialised and gendered tools of power that can be hostile and biased towards minoritised teachers, and urge reconsideration of their overuse in higher education.
KW - Australia
KW - Higher education
KW - intersectionality
KW - minoritised academics
KW - neoliberalism
KW - Student Evaluations of Teaching (SETs)
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85101218816&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/13613324.2021.1890560
DO - 10.1080/13613324.2021.1890560
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85101218816
SN - 1361-3324
VL - 27
SP - 139
EP - 155
JO - Race Ethnicity and Education
JF - Race Ethnicity and Education
IS - 2
ER -