Publication Date
| In 2015 | 0 |
| Since 2014 | 0 |
| Since 2011 (last 5 years) | 4 |
| Since 2006 (last 10 years) | 11 |
| Since 1996 (last 20 years) | 16 |
Descriptor
Source
| Communication Education | 16 |
Author
| Myers, Scott A. | 16 |
| Martin, Matthew M. | 6 |
| Goodboy, Alan K. | 3 |
| Mottet, Timothy P. | 3 |
| Barton, Matthew H. | 2 |
| Jernberg, Kodiane A. | 2 |
| Schrodt, Paul | 2 |
| Turman, Paul D. | 2 |
| Weber, Keith | 2 |
| Witt, Paul L. | 2 |
| More ▼ | |
Publication Type
| Journal Articles | 16 |
| Reports - Research | 12 |
| Reports - Evaluative | 4 |
Education Level
| Higher Education | 12 |
| Postsecondary Education | 3 |
Audience
Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results
Mansson, Daniel H.; Myers, Scott A. – Communication Education, 2012
The purposes of this study were (a) to develop a new measure to assess doctoral advisees' use of relational maintenance behaviors with their advisors, and (b) to examine both advisees' (n = 636) and advisors' (n = 141) perceptions of their mentoring relationship using mentoring enactment theory (MET; Kalbfleisch, 2002). The results of…
Descriptors: Doctoral Programs, Graduate Students, Faculty Advisers, Mentors
Goodboy, Alan K.; Myers, Scott A. – Communication Education, 2012
The purpose of this study was to investigate if college students' verbal aggressiveness and argumentativeness traits promote their tendencies to engage in instructional dissent (i.e., expressive, rhetorical, vengeful). Participants were 172 undergraduate students who completed a self-report survey measuring these traits and their dissent practices…
Descriptors: Dissent, Interpersonal Communication, Personality Traits, Undergraduate Students
Weber, Keith; Martin, Matthew M.; Myers, Scott A. – Communication Education, 2011
This article presents the Instructional Beliefs Model which forwards that teacher behaviors, student characteristics, and course-specific structural issues combine to influence students' instructional beliefs. Through these instructional beliefs, the first-order variables influence student learning outcomes. Three studies were conducted to…
Descriptors: Teacher Behavior, Student Characteristics, Course Organization, Student Attitudes
Goodboy, Alan K.; Bolkan, San; Myers, Scott A.; Zhao, Xing – Communication Education, 2011
The purpose of this study was to examine a theoretical model explaining the influence of instructor power (i.e., coercive, reward, legitimate, expert, referent) on students' relational and social influence communication behaviors (i.e., student affinity-seeking strategies, student behavior alteration techniques) across two cultures. Participants…
Descriptors: Student Behavior, Structural Equation Models, Foreign Countries, Rewards
Schrodt, Paul; Witt, Paul L.; Turman, Paul D.; Myers, Scott A.; Barton, Matthew H.; Jernberg, Kodiane A. – Communication Education, 2009
This study tested two models of instructor credibility as a potential mediator of instructors' prosocial communication behaviors (e.g., confirmation, clarity, and nonverbal immediacy) and students' learning outcomes. Participants included 1,416 undergraduate students from four different institutions across the United States. Results of structural…
Descriptors: Credibility, College Faculty, Undergraduate Students, Student Attitudes
Horan, Sean M.; Myers, Scott A. – Communication Education, 2009
A growing body of research indicates that classroom justice concerns are important to students. When students perceive their instructors are not concerned about justice, they report a host of negative outcomes. Due to the importance of justice assigned to students, the present study sought to understand how instructors view justice. Results…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Teacher Attitudes, Justice, Power Structure
Kennedy-Lightsey, Carrie D.; Myers, Scott A. – Communication Education, 2009
This study examined the associations between students' self-reported verbal aggressiveness and argumentativeness and their perceptions of student BATs (Golish, 1999) as appropriate and effective as well as how likely they were to use each BAT. Participants were 187 undergraduate students enrolled in communication courses at a large Mid-Atlantic…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Student Attitudes, Aggression, Student Behavior
Dunleavy, Katie Neary; Martin, Matthew M.; Brann, Maria; Booth-Butterfield, Melanie; Myers, Scott A.; Weber, Keith – Communication Education, 2008
Nagging is a persuasive tactic yet to be fully explored in instructional communication. Nagging involves an exchange in which a student makes persistent requests of an instructor who fails to comply. The purpose of the study was to examine student nagging behavior and, specifically, to examine nagging as a potentially face threatening act as part…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Teacher Student Relationship, Student Behavior, Pragmatics
Schrodt, Paul; Witt, Paul L.; Myers, Scott A.; Turman, Paul D.; Barton, Matthew H.; Jernberg, Kodiane A. – Communication Education, 2008
This study tested two theoretical models of learner empowerment as a potential mediator of teacher power use and students' ratings of instruction. Participants included 1,416 undergraduate students from four different institutions in the United States. Results of structural equation modeling provided more support for the partial mediation model…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Structural Equation Models, Models, Student Empowerment
Goodboy, Alan K.; Myers, Scott A. – Communication Education, 2008
A live lecture experiment was conducted where teacher confirmation was manipulated (i.e., not confirming, somewhat confirming, confirming) across three college courses. After the lecture, students completed a post test assessing positive (i.e., student communication motives, student participation) and negative (i.e., challenge behaviors)…
Descriptors: Teacher Student Relationship, Student Participation, Lecture Method, Teacher Behavior
Myers, Scott A.; Edwards, Chad; Wahl, Shawn T.; Martin, Matthew M. – Communication Education, 2007
This study investigated the link between college students' perceptions of instructors' aggressive communication and students' involvement in and out of the classroom. Participants were 218 students enrolled in introductory communication courses. Results indicated that students' reports of instructor argumentativeness were not positively associated…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Interaction, Information Seeking, Interpersonal Communication
Mottet, Timothy P.; Martin, Matthew M.; Myers, Scott A. – Communication Education, 2004
In light of a new "student engagement" benchmark for teaching and institutional effectiveness in higher education, this study focused on the relationships between perceived instructor use of verbal approach and avoidance relational strategies and students' motives for communicating with their instructors. The data suggest that perceived instructor…
Descriptors: Student Motivation, Student Attitudes, Teacher Student Relationship, Verbal Communication
Peer reviewedMyers, Scott A.; Martin, Matthew M.; Mottet, Timothy P. – Communication Education, 2002
Explores how student motives to communicate with their instructors are influenced jointly by perceived instructor socio-communicative style and student socio-communicative orientation. Finds that female students communicate more for the functional motive than male students and male students communicate more for the relational and the sycophantic…
Descriptors: Assertiveness, Communication (Thought Transfer), Communication Research, Higher Education
Peer reviewedMyers, Scott A.; Knox, Ronda L. – Communication Education, 2001
Explores the use of information-seeking strategies (i.e., overt, indirect, third party, testing, observing) among students in the college classroom. Notes that researchers did not find a significant relationship between student use of the observing information-seeking strategy and perceived instructor clarity, verbal immediacy, and verbal…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Communication Research, Higher Education, Information Seeking
Peer reviewedMartin, Matthew M.; Myers, Scott A.; Mottet, Timothy P. – Communication Education, 1999
Identifies five underlying reasons students communicate with their instructors: relational, functional, excuse, participation, and sycophancy. Finds that students who communicate for all the interpersonal communication motives tend to communicate more with their instructors to relate and participate, while students who communicated for the motive…
Descriptors: Classroom Communication, Communication Research, Higher Education, Interpersonal Communication
Previous Page | Next Page ยป
Pages: 1 | 2
Direct link
