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Sawyer, Chris R.; Richey, Delwin E.; Goen, Karley A. – Basic Communication Course Annual, 2021
Students' emotional responses often provide valuable indicators of whether they are languishing or flourishing in their first-year classes, including introductory communication courses. Grading often exerts a strong influence on students' emotions. However, though students generally have positive moods after receiving high marks and negative ones…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Student Reaction, Grades (Scholastic), Assignments
Sawyer, Chris R.; Richey, Delwin E.; Goen, Karley A. – Communication Education, 2019
Previous studies of grading as instructional feedback reveal contrary patterns of motivation among public speaking students. That is, in some cases students who received lower grades on their initial speech assignments made substantial improvements on their subsequent speeches. In other studies, scholars have reported the exact opposite finding.…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Public Speaking, Communication Skills, Speeches
Finn, Amber N.; Sawyer, Chris R.; Behnke, Ralph R. – Communication Education, 2009
With the goal of identifying the characteristics or traits students bring to the classroom that predispose them to panic when faced with the threat of presenting in front of an audience, this study introduced a subtype of public-speaking state anxiety--anxious arousal. Specifically, this study examined the extent to which trait anxiety and…
Descriptors: Public Speaking, Anxiety, Models, Personality Traits
Larseingue, Matt; Sawyer, Chris R.; Finn, Amber N. – Communication Education, 2012
Although previous research has linked students' expected grades to numerous pedagogical variables, this factor has been all but ignored by instructional communication scholars. In the present study, 315 undergraduates were presented with grading scenarios representing differing combinations of course rigor, teacher immediacy, and student…
Descriptors: Self Efficacy, Student Attitudes, Componential Analysis, Assignments
Finn, Amber N.; Sawyer, Chris R.; Schrodt, Paul – Communication Education, 2009
Increased public speaking confidence is often cited as a major benefit for undergraduates taking the basic communication course. Several scholars have reported that the state anxiety of novice speakers declines progressively during performance, a phenomenon called within-session habituation. However, the contributions of these short-term…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Public Speaking, Audiences, Instructional Effectiveness

Behnke, Ralph R.; Sawyer, Chris R. – Communication Education, 1999
Finds that both state and trait anxiety levels during three pre-performance events were ordered in a quadratic, v-shaped episodic pattern; the highest level of anticipatory anxiety occurred just before speaking, the second-highest level occurred at the time the assignment was announced and explained, and the lowest level occurred during the time…
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Higher Education, Public Speaking

Behnke, Ralph R.; Sawyer, Chris R. – Communication Education, 2000
Investigates gender differences in anticipatory state anxiety and narrowband trait anxiety patterns among college students. Finds significant gender-based pattern differences, with higher anxiety patterns reported by female speakers. Finds that both female and male speaker groups exhibited the hypothesized quadratic v-shaped pattern of mean…
Descriptors: Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Higher Education, Public Speaking

Sawyer, Chris R.; Behnke, Ralph R. – Communication Quarterly, 1997
Shows that recollections of state speaking anxiety decreased over time, and that the rate of attenuation was associated with the speaker's level of trait speaking anxiety. Finds also that recollections of state speaking anxiety (implicit memory) were attenuated over time, and that the magnitude of this decline was predicted by the speaker's level…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Communication Apprehension, Communication Research, Higher Education
Roberts, James B.; Sawyer, Chris R.; Behnke, Ralph R. – Western Journal of Communication, 2004
Recent studies on the anxiety patterns of public speakers have generally supported perspectives on emotion from the field of neurobiology. Without relying on highly invasive or cumbersome technology, much of the biology of speech anxiety has been derived from heart rate studies of physiological arousal rather than examining more direct evidence…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Anxiety, Public Speaking, Biochemistry

Sawyer, Chris R.; Behnke, Ralph R. – JACA: Journal of the Association for Communication Administration, 2001
Addresses concerns when a college-level course utilizes a number of instructors and sections. Notes the importance of the various sections receiving essentially the same educational experience. Describes section variation trends. Discusses use of the computer assisted speech evaluation software at Texas Christian University. Recommends the use of…
Descriptors: Computer Software, Evaluation Methods, Higher Education, Instructional Improvement
Behnke, Ralph R.; Sawyer, Chris R. – Communication Education, 2004
In the present study, it was hypothesized that (1) changes in (1) state anxiety from rest to the beginning of a speech (sensitization), in (2) changes in state anxiety during the first minute of the speech presentation (habituation 1), and in (3) state anxiety during the last minute of the speech presentation (habituation 2) are all significant…
Descriptors: Learning Processes, Classroom Techniques, Public Speaking, Habituation