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Hannah, Maria; Downing, Sophie S. – Communication Education, 2023
This multimethod study was conducted to explore students' decision-making to approach or avoid interactions with peers about instructors and investigate motivations for instructional dissent. Participants (N = 124 college students) responded to measures of instructional dissent behavior and motivations for social gossip, then responded to an…
Descriptors: College Students, Decision Making, Peer Relationship, Interaction
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Bolkan, San; Goodboy, Alan K.; Shin, Matt; Chiasson, Rebekah M. – Communication Education, 2022
This study was conducted to model how teacher misbehaviors associate with reductions in students' sustained attention. Participants (N = 423 college students) responded to measures of their perceptions of teacher antagonism, affect for their instructor, intrinsic motivation to learn, and sustained attention throughout the semester. Results of a…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Attitudes, Learner Engagement, Teacher Behavior
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LeFebvre, Leah E.; Carmack, Heather J.; Pederson, Joshua R. – Communication Education, 2020
Course evaluations can be an effective tool for students to appraise a course and instructor; however, they can also be a communicative space for students to write comments instructors perceive as hurtful, need to make sense of and reconcile with their instructional practice. Instructors turn to others to help make sense of and cope with comments.…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Women Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Course Evaluation
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Carmack, Heather J.; LeFebvre, Leah E. – Communication Education, 2019
Instructors often struggle with how to make sense of and handle hurtful student course evaluation comments. These comments can be difficult to resolve when they move from constructive course criticisms to hurtful comments about an instructor's race, gender, appearance, or personality. Relying on the Meaning Making Model (MMM), this study explored…
Descriptors: Course Evaluation, Student Evaluation of Teacher Performance, Teacher Response, Emotional Response
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Chesebro, Joseph L.; Lyon, Alexander – Communication Education, 2020
This study used rhetorical and relational goal theory to examine the different ways college instructors respond to disruptive behaviors by students in the classroom. Student participants provided and described a critical incident involving a disruptive classmate that either was or was not handled effectively by the instructor. Results identified…
Descriptors: Teacher Response, Behavior Problems, Student Behavior, Classroom Techniques
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Broeckelman-Post, Melissa Ann; Tacconelli, Angelica; Guzmán, Jaime; Rios, Maritza; Calero, Beverly; Latif, Farah – Communication Education, 2016
This study sought to investigate whether there was any relationship between teacher misbehaviors and student interest and engagement. Consistent with Emotional Response Theory and models for how teacher behavior impacts student interest and engagement, teacher misbehaviors were strongly correlated with student interest and weakly correlated with…
Descriptors: Teacher Behavior, Behavior Problems, Teacher Influence, Student Interests
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Liang, Yuhua – Communication Education, 2015
Instructors have the ability to respond to student evaluations on RateMyProfessors.com (RMP). The current research conceptualized the juxtaposition of student evaluations and instructor responses using communication processes on participatory websites. In an original experiment, the results demonstrated that when faced with multiple negative…
Descriptors: Student Evaluation, Credibility, Student Motivation, Student Evaluation of Teacher Performance
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Vallade, Jessalyn I.; Malachowski, Colleen M. – Communication Education, 2015
Using Attribution Theory as a theoretical framework, this study explored the role of forgiveness in impacting student nonverbal responsiveness, out-of-class communication (OCC), and perceptions of cognitive and affective learning following instructor misbehavior. Additionally, the role of instructor nonverbal immediacy was examined. Participants…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Behavior, Attribution Theory, Undergraduate Students
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DeGroot, Jocelyn M.; Young, Valerie J.; VanSlette, Sarah H. – Communication Education, 2015
This study investigates college student perceptions of instructor credibility based on the content of an instructor's Twitterfeed and student beliefs about Twitter as a communication tool. Quantitative and qualitative methods were utilized to explore the effects of three manipulated Twitter feeds (e.g., tweeting social topics, professional topics,…
Descriptors: Credibility, Teacher Effectiveness, Teacher Behavior, Student Attitudes
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Edwards, Autumn; Edwards, Chad – Communication Education, 2013
The purpose of this experiment was to test the influence of mixed reviews appearing as computer-mediated word-of-mouth communication (WOM) on student perceptions of instructors (attractiveness and credibility) and attitudes toward learning course content (affective learning and state motivation). Using the heuristic-systematic processing model, it…
Descriptors: Computer Mediated Communication, Student Evaluation of Teacher Performance, Teacher Characteristics, Credibility
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Banas, John A.; Dunbar, Norah; Rodriguez, Dariela; Liu, Shr-Jie – Communication Education, 2011
The primary goal of this project is to provide a summary of extant research regarding humor in the classroom, with an emphasis on identifying and explaining inconsistencies in research findings and offering new directions for future studies in this area. First, the definitions, functions, and main theories of humor are reviewed. Next, the paper…
Descriptors: Humor, Classroom Communication, Communication Research, Classroom Research
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Sidelinger, Robert J.; Bolen, Derek M.; Frisby, Brandi N.; McMullen, Audra L. – Communication Education, 2011
Using systems theory as a lens, instructor misbehaviors were examined in the context of the college classroom to determine if student-to-student connectedness mediated the relationships between instructor misbehaviors and student involvement and affective learning. Student-to-student connectedness mediated the relationships between instructor…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Teacher Student Relationship, Student Attitudes, Teacher Attitudes
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Mazer, Joseph P.; Graham, Elizabeth E. – Communication Education, 2015
Periodic assessment and scrutiny of the discipline's measurement practices, instruments, and research findings are necessary to provide clarity and direction by revealing what we know, how we know it, and where the knowledge gaps exist. Reflective reviews have produced ample appraisals of the theory, research, and methods employed in the conduct…
Descriptors: Communication Research, Instruction, Measurement, Test Reliability
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Goodboy, Alan K. – Communication Education, 2011
The purpose of this study was to (a) identify perceived triggering agents of student dissent in the college classroom, (b) determine common target receivers of dissent, and (c) reveal the types of dissent that students enact based on their intentional motives and construction of message content. Participants were 123 undergraduate students who…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Classroom Environment, Undergraduate Students, Student Attitudes
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Edwards, Chad; Edwards, Autumn; Qing, Qingmei; Wahl, Shawn T. – Communication Education, 2007
The purpose of this study was to experimentally test the influence of computer-mediated word-of-mouth communication (WOM) on student perceptions of instructors (attractiveness and credibility) and on student attitudes toward learning course content (affective learning and state motivation). It was hypothesized that students who receive positive…
Descriptors: Learning Motivation, Course Content, Student Attitudes, Computer Mediated Communication
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