Quote:
Originally Posted by TexTushHog
I wonder if the degree of bias varied by the gender of the student.
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Interesting question. There were a total of 72 students who started the study. Although I haven't found the data, I believe it was 36/36. Not all of the participants finished the course and completed the questionnaire, so it's possible the gender makeup was schewed. The study has been attacked for a number of reasons, small sample size being one. Here's one example rated to your question:
• Student gender. Readers are given no information about the breakdown of student gender within each of the class sections. Existing research has suggested that student gender may have a modest but significant effect on the ratings of male and female instructors (Centra & Gaubatz, 2000). While MacNell et al. claim to have collected information about student gender, they did not report it and thus the gender composition of the subjects remains unknown to readers. Therefore, the observed differences in ratings cannot be fully attributed to gender bias if the effects of student gender were not controlled.