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Gender Stereotypes in Student Evaluations of Teaching

Renström, Emma LU ; Gustafsson Sendén, Marie and Lindqvist, Anna LU (2021) In Frontiers in Education
Abstract
This paper tests how gender stereotypes may result in biased student evaluations of teaching (SET). We thereby contribute to an ongoing discussion about the validity and use of SET in academia. According to social psychological theory, gender biases in SET may occur because of a lack of fit between gender stereotypes, and the professional roles individuals engage in. A lack of fit often leads to more negative evaluations. Given that the role as a lecturer is associated with masculinity, women might suffer from biased SET because gender stereotypes indicate that they do not fit with this role. In two 2 × 2 between groups online experiments (N's = 400 and 452), participants read about a fictitious woman or man lecturer, described in terms of... (More)
This paper tests how gender stereotypes may result in biased student evaluations of teaching (SET). We thereby contribute to an ongoing discussion about the validity and use of SET in academia. According to social psychological theory, gender biases in SET may occur because of a lack of fit between gender stereotypes, and the professional roles individuals engage in. A lack of fit often leads to more negative evaluations. Given that the role as a lecturer is associated with masculinity, women might suffer from biased SET because gender stereotypes indicate that they do not fit with this role. In two 2 × 2 between groups online experiments (N's = 400 and 452), participants read about a fictitious woman or man lecturer, described in terms of stereotypically feminine or masculine behavior, and evaluated the lecturer on different SET outcomes. Results showed that women lecturers were not disfavored in general, but that described feminine or masculine behaviors led to gendered evaluations of the lecturer. The results were especially pronounced in Experiment 2 where a lecturer described as displaying feminine behaviors was expected to also be more approachable, was better liked and the students rather attended their course. However, a lecturer displaying masculine behaviors were instead perceived as being more competent, a better pedagogue and leader. Gender incongruent behavior was therefore not sanctioned by lower SET. The results still support that SET should not be used as sole indicators of pedagogic ability of a lecturer for promotion and hiring decisions because they may be gender-biased. (Less)
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author
; and
organization
publishing date
type
Contribution to journal
publication status
published
subject
keywords
student evaluations of teaching (SET), gender stereotypes, gender bias, social psychology, experiment
in
Frontiers in Education
article number
280
publisher
Frontiers Media S. A.
external identifiers
  • scopus:85099938715
ISSN
2504-284X
DOI
10.3389/feduc.2020.571287
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
4ac2549a-1d72-4b12-a784-56602300c4cf
date added to LUP
2021-01-11 08:20:33
date last changed
2022-12-30 11:58:21
@article{4ac2549a-1d72-4b12-a784-56602300c4cf,
  abstract     = {{This paper tests how gender stereotypes may result in biased student evaluations of teaching (SET). We thereby contribute to an ongoing discussion about the validity and use of SET in academia. According to social psychological theory, gender biases in SET may occur because of a lack of fit between gender stereotypes, and the professional roles individuals engage in. A lack of fit often leads to more negative evaluations. Given that the role as a lecturer is associated with masculinity, women might suffer from biased SET because gender stereotypes indicate that they do not fit with this role. In two 2 × 2 between groups online experiments (N's = 400 and 452), participants read about a fictitious woman or man lecturer, described in terms of stereotypically feminine or masculine behavior, and evaluated the lecturer on different SET outcomes. Results showed that women lecturers were not disfavored in general, but that described feminine or masculine behaviors led to gendered evaluations of the lecturer. The results were especially pronounced in Experiment 2 where a lecturer described as displaying feminine behaviors was expected to also be more approachable, was better liked and the students rather attended their course. However, a lecturer displaying masculine behaviors were instead perceived as being more competent, a better pedagogue and leader. Gender incongruent behavior was therefore not sanctioned by lower SET. The results still support that SET should not be used as sole indicators of pedagogic ability of a lecturer for promotion and hiring decisions because they may be gender-biased.}},
  author       = {{Renström, Emma and Gustafsson Sendén, Marie and Lindqvist, Anna}},
  issn         = {{2504-284X}},
  keywords     = {{student evaluations of teaching (SET); gender stereotypes; gender bias; social psychology; experiment}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  publisher    = {{Frontiers Media S. A.}},
  series       = {{Frontiers in Education}},
  title        = {{Gender Stereotypes in Student Evaluations of Teaching}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2020.571287}},
  doi          = {{10.3389/feduc.2020.571287}},
  year         = {{2021}},
}