The creator of the site got the idea from the American website Rate My Professors and some British professors are not happy about it.

Chris Parr of Inside Higher Ed reports.

‘We Are Not Dancing Bears’

The man behind the Rate Your Lecturer website, which encourages British university students to publicly praise or censure their teachers, has defended the project against a glut of criticism from academics.

Michael Bulman, founder of the site, said he believed it would “help to redress the balance” between teaching and research in British universities, adding that too many institutions held the latter in higher regard than the former — to the detriment of students.

“When I was at uni, people were comparing and contrasting their courses and lecturers, and saying how some were better than others,” said Bulman, who graduated with a B.A. in history from Northumbria University last year.

“I also spent a year in the U.S., where they already have the Rate My Professors site, and the idea came from there. I just thought I could do it better.”

His site ranks British universities and lecturers on the basis of feedback from users, who give scores out of 10. It also contains a section where students can list teachers’ pros and cons.

One of those leading the protests against the site is Bill Cooke, head of the department of organization, work and technology at Lancaster University Management School. His blog post on the issue — declaring that lecturers are human beings, “not dancing bears” — has been accessed around 8,000 times.

“For people early in their lecturing career, to be subject to that very public scrutiny is challenging and threatening,” he told Times Higher Education. “There is anger and anxiety about the debt people are incurring as students and what will happen to them afterwards. Coming out and saying which lecturers are good or bad is an expression of that.”


 
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