LSU’s Course Experience Survey is an updated, university-wide end-of-term instrument that centers on student learning experiences—including clarity of expectations, alignment of assignments, and how course design supports engagement and understanding.
Course Experience Survey
LSU is introducing the Course Experience Survey, a more learning-centered way to gather
student feedback each academic period (formerly Student Course Evaluations). The survey
will focus on how course design, activities, and feedback support learning, offering
a clearer picture of the learning experience at LSU.
The new survey instrument will provide sharper insights for faculty and a consistent
foundation across colleges. With a concise core question set and the transition to
Watermark Course Evaluations & Surveys, LSU will take a more intentional, campus-wide
approach to understanding the student experience.
This shift will strengthen feedback for both faculty and students. Faculty will receive
clearer, more actionable input. Students will have a more meaningful way to share
their learning experience and help shape future courses.

What’s New
The Course Experience Survey reflects a more intentional, learning-centered approach to student feedback. Two shifts will guide this direction for LSU:
A Sharper Focus on Learning.
The survey will highlight key elements of effective learning environments: clear expectations, alignment between activities and objectives, relevant materials, useful feedback, and opportunities for deeper learning. These priorities are built into the LSU core question set and supported by national research, giving faculty clearer insight into how students experience their courses.
A Short, Consistent LSU Core.
The survey will use a concise core set of questions across all colleges. This will reduce redundancy, make the survey clearer for students, and create a shared foundation for understanding the learning experience at LSU. Departments will still be able to include discipline-specific questions, preserving both consistency and academic autonomy.
What to Expect
Flexibility where it matters.
A short LSU core will anchor the survey, with room for departments to add discipline-specific questions (Beginning Summer 2026).
A concise, focused instrument.
Redundancy will be reduced, and questions will center on the elements most connected to learning.
Support throughout.
Guidance and tools will be available before the new survey goes live and throughout our pilot launch in Spring 2026.
Contact Us
Tara Rose
Associate Vice Provost
225-578-4915
Lee Daigle
Evaluation & Engagement Manager
225-578-5638
Questions & Support


