Effects of Instructor Accent on Undergraduate Evaluations and Learning at a Catholic College

Aubrey Scheopner Torres, K. Doran, Chih-Chien Huang, E. Rickenbach
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Abstract

Catholic institutions of higher education are called to form citizens who fight against injustice, including persistent racial oppression. To do this, Catholic, public, and other private institutions must provide students opportunities to learn about and confront racism (Johnston, 2014). It is important that these institutions confront these issues because they employ faculty and staff who may experience systemic racism and can provide cultural knowledge to aid deconstructing racist ideologies. Undergraduate student evaluations of instructors or faculty, however, indicate discrimination against those perceived as non-white and with non-native English accents. This study focuses on one form of racism at a Catholic liberal arts college: bias against instructors who speak with a non-native English accent. This between-groups experimental study was guided by critical sociolinguistic theory and sociocultural theory to examine patterns in undergraduate engagement with material that varied only by instructor accent. Participants (n=98) completed a pre-assessment, a microlecture (randomized by accent), a post-assessment, and a microlecture evaluation. The study’s theoretical frameworks suggest that students would demonstrate bias against non-white presenters, despite the Catholic context and having no visual cues about the race or ethnicity of the presenter. Pre-and post-assessment results indicated that the microlecture had some limited effects on student learning regardless of instructor accent; however, instructors that were perceived as white had significantly higher ratings in terms of the student belief that they “showed enthusiasm about the subject matter” and that “watching this microlecture improved [their] score on the quiz.” These findings suggest continued work is needed to understand and confront issues of systemic racism in higher education.
天主教学院教师口音对本科生评价和学习的影响
天主教高等教育机构被要求培养反对不公正的公民,包括持久的种族压迫。要做到这一点,天主教、公立和其他私立机构必须为学生提供了解和面对种族主义的机会(Johnston, 2014)。这些机构面对这些问题是很重要的,因为他们雇用的教职员工可能经历过系统性的种族主义,可以提供文化知识来帮助解构种族主义意识形态。然而,本科生对教师或教师的评估表明,那些被认为是非白人和非英语母语的人受到歧视。本研究聚焦于一所天主教文理学院的一种种族主义:对非英语母语教师的偏见。这项组间实验研究以批判社会语言学理论和社会文化理论为指导,旨在研究仅因教师口音而异的本科生对材料的参与模式。参与者(n=98)完成了预评估、微讲座(按口音随机)、后评估和微讲座评估。该研究的理论框架表明,学生会对非白人演讲者表现出偏见,尽管是在天主教背景下,并且没有关于演讲者种族或民族的视觉线索。前后评估结果表明,无论教师的口音如何,微讲座对学生学习的影响都有限;然而,那些被认为是白人的教师在学生的信念方面得到了明显更高的评分,他们“对主题表现出了热情”,“观看这个微讲座提高了他们在测验中的分数”。这些发现表明,需要继续努力来理解和面对高等教育中的系统性种族主义问题。
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