Teammate Reviews

In order to enable continuous improvement, both as a team and individually, it is critical to gather quality feedback. Such feedback should point to both strengths as well as areas for improvement. As part of the feedback collection in this course, you will be asked to provide individual reviews of your teammates, generally via an online form. Here are the instructions to follow in filling out that form:

What the Various Ratings Mean

On the teammate review form, you will have to rate each of your teammates (as well as yourself) based on a multiple-choice, scale from Terrible to Excellent. The precise meaning of each option may not be obvious, so here are detailed definitions for each to help you in making the right selection.

Productivity and Contribution Ratings

Rating Meaning
Terrible Teammate has contributed nothing (or almost nothing) to the project.
Poor Teammate has contributed something, but it was clearly below expectations in terms of quantity and/or quality.
Acceptable Teammate contributed the bare minimum. He/she was generally responsible in completing his/her tasks, but is definitely not impressing anyone with his/her work.
Good Teammate did a very nice job in completing his/her tasks. You are pleased with his/her contributions.
Excellent Teammate clearly went above and beyond what was expected in a significant way. This score equates to proposing that the teammate receive an A&B point for his/her extra contributions.

Communication and Professionalism Ratings

Rating Meaning
Terrible This rating indicates extremely bad communication and professionalism. A teammate with this score may have engaged in little or no communication, missing all or almost all meetings. Alternatively, he/she may display highly offensive and counterproductive behaviors in how he/she treats fellow teammates.
Poor This rating points to serious issues with communication and professionalism. A teammate with this score may be engaging in some communication, but it is really an inadequate amount. He/she may be frequently late to meetings, or not participate well during them. He/she may display inappropriate or disrespectful behaviors in how he/she treats fellow teammates.
Acceptable Teammate displays the bare minimum for acceptable communication and professionalism. He/she has occasional lapses—for example, being late for meetings and/or disengaged from the team—but is doing just enough right to prevent it from being a problem.
Good Teammate does a very nice job with communication and professionalism. You are pleased with how well he/she communicates and how professionally he/she behaves.
Excellent Teammate clearly goes above and beyond when it comes to communication and professionalism. This score equates to proposing that the teammate receive an A&B point for the extra effort that he/she puts into communication and professionalism.

How to Provide a High-Quality Review

Here are some key criteria to keep in mind when providing your reviews:

How the Reviews Will be Used

Here are some key ways that the reviews will (and will not) be used:


Grading Rubric

Teammate reviews are graded based on the reviews you submit for other teammates, not based on the reviews you receive from teammates.

10% of each students individual productivity grade for an iteration is based on the quality (with respect to the above instructions) of the teammate reviews they submit. These 10 percentage points are divided equally among the required reviews to produce a weight for each review (e.g., if 4 reviews were required, then the weight for each review would be 2.5 percentage points).

For each review that is missing or failed to follow instructions, 0 points are given for that review.

Caution! Failure to provide a convincing justification (as required above) in a review will result in 0 points for that review.

Caution! There is a common problem with students giving all their teammates scores of Excellent without providing convincing justifications for the scores. These students generally receive 0 points on their reviews.