Fitted: the impact of academics’ attire on students’ evaluations and intentions
Fitted: the impact of academics’ attire on students’ evaluations and intentions
Dressing formally or informally as an academic may be a trade-off when it comes to managing impressions towards students, but the extant body of literature remains limited with only mixed results. This research is the first focussed investigation to examine the effects of academic dress formality on the ‘big two’ of impression formation, perceptions of warmth and competence. In a series of three controlled laboratory experiments (total N = 1361), we find dress formality to increase perceptions of competence but to decrease perceptions of warmth, which leads to ‘downstream’ effects on students’ evaluations of instructors and behavioural intentions to enrol in a course. Furthermore, we demonstrate that perceptions of competence may be subject to other information cues (success communication and discipline norms) that can mitigate negative effects associated with dress informality. Implications for higher education practitioners are provided.
390-410
Oliver, Sebastian
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Marder, Ben
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Erz, Antonia
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Kietzmann, Jan
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Oliver, Sebastian
06f4df0c-df3a-409f-a4f9-b28065fb2cb8
Marder, Ben
6c556d4a-af17-4625-b03b-fe84159fdf2d
Erz, Antonia
f0fa9fc3-2a65-4efb-94c9-e04b33554130
Kietzmann, Jan
9ff6f207-4734-454e-8aeb-c07f2950140d
Oliver, Sebastian, Marder, Ben, Erz, Antonia and Kietzmann, Jan
(2022)
Fitted: the impact of academics’ attire on students’ evaluations and intentions.
Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 47 (3), .
(doi:10.1080/02602938.2021.1921105).
Abstract
Dressing formally or informally as an academic may be a trade-off when it comes to managing impressions towards students, but the extant body of literature remains limited with only mixed results. This research is the first focussed investigation to examine the effects of academic dress formality on the ‘big two’ of impression formation, perceptions of warmth and competence. In a series of three controlled laboratory experiments (total N = 1361), we find dress formality to increase perceptions of competence but to decrease perceptions of warmth, which leads to ‘downstream’ effects on students’ evaluations of instructors and behavioural intentions to enrol in a course. Furthermore, we demonstrate that perceptions of competence may be subject to other information cues (success communication and discipline norms) that can mitigate negative effects associated with dress informality. Implications for higher education practitioners are provided.
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Fitted the impact of academics attire on students evaluations and intentions
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e-pub ahead of print date: 19 May 2022
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Local EPrints ID: 481040
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/481040
ISSN: 0260-2938
PURE UUID: 571535fc-7167-49e9-8e50-3074e20f27d1
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Date deposited: 15 Aug 2023 16:38
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:21
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Author:
Sebastian Oliver
Author:
Ben Marder
Author:
Antonia Erz
Author:
Jan Kietzmann
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