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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 159 results
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Morreale, Sherwyn; Staley, Constance; Stavrositu, Carmen; Krakowiak, Maja – Communication Education, 2015
The purpose of this study is to better understand new college students' attitudes toward and perceptions of communication media and technology and themselves as communicators in the context of communication competence. Building on the results of a previous qualitative study, the researchers developed a survey focused on communication…
Descriptors: College Students, Student Attitudes, College Freshmen, Information Technology
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Choi, Charles W.; Honeycutt, James M.; Bodie, Graham D. – Communication Education, 2015
Imagined interactions (IIs) constitute a type of social cognition that can reduce fear of communication. Through the mental preparation enabled by IIs, an individual can reduce disfluencies and mitigate the anxiety that arises from a speech. Study 1 indicated that rehearsal influences the reduction of silent pauses but not vocalized pauses. In…
Descriptors: Social Cognition, Interpersonal Communication, Imagination, Interaction
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Bolkan, San; Goodboy, Alan K. – Communication Education, 2015
Instructors' use of humor is generally a positive influence on student outcomes. However, examinations of humor have found that specific types of messages may not impact, or may even reverse, its positive effect. Instructional humor processing theory (IHPT) has been used to explain how humor impacts student learning. The current study sought…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Humor, Educational Theories, Predictor Variables
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Frisby, Brandi N.; Goodboy, Alan K.; Buckner, Marjorie M. – Communication Education, 2015
Extending research on instructional dissent beyond student reports, this study examined the potential for students' expressed dissent to have deleterious effects on faculty members. Instructors (N = 113) completed surveys about students' instructional dissent regarding their classes and reported their own burnout, commitment,…
Descriptors: Teacher Surveys, Student Behavior, Dissent, Teacher Burnout
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O'Boyle, Neil – Communication Education, 2014
When adults enter university after several years of work and life experience, they must negotiate their identity as mature students and their friendship with other students. In this interpretative study, I examined the tensions experienced by 15 such students (aged 28-54) at a university in Ireland where they were attempting to integrate…
Descriptors: Adult Students, Nontraditional Students, College Students, Friendship
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Mazer, Joseph P.; McKenna-Buchanan, Timothy P.; Quinlan, Margaret M.; Titsworth, Scott – Communication Education, 2014
Based on emotional response theory (ERT), recent researchers have observed connections between teachers' communication behaviors and students' emotional reactions. In the present study, we further elaborated ERT by exploring the effects of teacher communication behaviors and emotional processes on discrete negative emotions, including…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Theories, Teacher Student Relationship, Interpersonal Communication
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Ball, Hannah; Goodboy, Alan K. – Communication Education, 2014
Psychological reactance theory (PRT) is largely understudied in the classroom context. In this experiment, we manipulated instructors' use of clarity and forceful language as antecedents of psychological reactance and examined student communication outcomes (i.e., instructional dissent and challenge behavior) as ways in which students restore…
Descriptors: Psychological Patterns, Emotional Response, Student Behavior, Interpersonal Communication
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Hendrix, Katherine Grace; Wilson, Cicely – Communication Education, 2014
Articles published in "Communication Education" ("CE") from 2000 to 2013 yielded four major themes: teacher/instructor to student communication, public speaking, technology, and identity. An analysis of the articles within each major theme revealed a notable absence of research investigating the experiences of students of color…
Descriptors: Periodicals, Classroom Communication, Public Speaking, Technology
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Miller, Ann Neville; Katt, James A.; Brown, Tim; Sivo, Stephen A. – Communication Education, 2014
In this study, we examined the potential mediating role of instructor credibility in the relationship of instructor self-disclosure and nonverbal immediacy to student incivility in the college classroom. Four hundred thirty-eight students completed online questionnaires regarding the instructor of the class they attended prior to the one in which…
Descriptors: Self Disclosure (Individuals), Credibility, Nonverbal Communication, Internet
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Holmgren, Jennifer Linn; Bolkan, San – Communication Education, 2014
Instructors do not always meet students' expectations. Instead, they may be perceived as engaging in misbehaviors or unfair teaching practices that ultimately lead to student dissatisfaction. When this happens, students have a variety of options including dissenting rhetorically. Though much is known about why students dissent, in the current…
Descriptors: Teacher Response, Rhetoric, Dissent, Student Attitudes
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Trad, Laura; Katt, James; Miller, Ann Neville – Communication Education, 2014
Instructor nonverbal immediacy has been associated with a range of positive student outcomes, but it is difficult to convey in an online environment. We investigated whether the text-based variable of face threat mitigation (FTM) alone--without the visual cues of nonverbally immediate behaviors--could significantly raise students' motivation…
Descriptors: College Faculty, Credibility, College Students, Student Motivation
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Simmons, Jake; Lowery-Hart, Russell; Wahl, Shawn T.; McBride, M. Chad – Communication Education, 2013
In this study, we sought to understand African-American students' higher-education experiences in predominantly White universities. We utilized Baxter's relational dialectics theory to study components of focus-group discussions in order to understand the discourse and meaning-making process of participants. Our findings provide insight…
Descriptors: African American Students, College Students, Student Experience, Whites
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Zhang, Qin; Zhang, Jibiao – Communication Education, 2013
In this study, we used the broaden-and-build theory and emotional response theory as the framework to examine the effects of instructors' positive emotions on student engagement and critical thinking in U.S. and Chinese classrooms, as well as the mediating role of students' positive emotions in their relationships. MANOVA results…
Descriptors: Emotional Response, Foreign Countries, Teacher Attitudes, Learner Engagement
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Zhang, Qin; Sapp, David A. – Communication Education, 2013
This research comprises two studies examining the antecedents and outcomes of psychological reactance in teacher requests in the instructional context. In Study 1 we investigated the mediating role of reactance in the relationship of perceived teacher request politeness and teacher-student relationship distance with student resistance intention.…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Resistance (Psychology), Teacher Student Relationship, Classroom Communication
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Claus, Christopher J.; Booth-Butterfield, Melanie; Chory, Rebecca M. – Communication Education, 2012
Using rhetorical/relational goal theory as a guiding frame, we examined relationships between instructor misbehaviors (i.e., indolence, incompetence, and offensiveness) and the likelihood of students communicating antisocial behavioral alteration techniques (BATs). More specifically, the study focused on whether students' perceptions of instructor…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Student Attitudes, Interpersonal Attraction, Humor
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