{"title":"Small samples, unreasonable generalizations, and outliers: Gender bias in student evaluation of teaching or three unhappy students?","authors":"B. Uttl, V. Violo","doi":"10.14293/s2199-1006.1.sor-.pputigr.v1","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"\nIn a widely cited and widely talked about study, MacNell et al. (2015) [1] examined SET ratings of one female and one male instructor, each teaching two sections of the same online course, one section under their true gender and the other section under false/opposite gender. MacNell et al. concluded that students rated perceived female instructors more harshly than perceived male instructors, demonstrating gender bias against perceived female instructors. Boring, Ottoboni, and Stark (2016) [2] re-analyzed MacNell et al.’s data and confirmed their conclusions. However, the design of MacNell et al. study is fundamentally flawed. First, MacNell et al.’ section sample sizes were extremely small, ranging from 8 to 12 students. Second, MacNell et al. included only one female and one male instructor. Third, MacNell et al.’s findings depend on three outliers – three unhappy students (all in perceived female conditions) who gave their instructors the lowest possible ratings on all or nearly all SET items. We re-analyzed MacNell et al.’s data with and without the three outliers. Our analyses showed that the gender bias against perceived female instructors disappeared. Instead, students rated the actual female vs. male instructor higher, regardless of perceived gender. MacNell et al.’s study is a real-life demonstration that conclusions based on extremely small sample-sized studies are unwarranted and uninterpretable.","PeriodicalId":91169,"journal":{"name":"ScienceOpen research","volume":"14 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-03-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"6","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"ScienceOpen research","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.14293/s2199-1006.1.sor-.pputigr.v1","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 6
Abstract
In a widely cited and widely talked about study, MacNell et al. (2015) [1] examined SET ratings of one female and one male instructor, each teaching two sections of the same online course, one section under their true gender and the other section under false/opposite gender. MacNell et al. concluded that students rated perceived female instructors more harshly than perceived male instructors, demonstrating gender bias against perceived female instructors. Boring, Ottoboni, and Stark (2016) [2] re-analyzed MacNell et al.’s data and confirmed their conclusions. However, the design of MacNell et al. study is fundamentally flawed. First, MacNell et al.’ section sample sizes were extremely small, ranging from 8 to 12 students. Second, MacNell et al. included only one female and one male instructor. Third, MacNell et al.’s findings depend on three outliers – three unhappy students (all in perceived female conditions) who gave their instructors the lowest possible ratings on all or nearly all SET items. We re-analyzed MacNell et al.’s data with and without the three outliers. Our analyses showed that the gender bias against perceived female instructors disappeared. Instead, students rated the actual female vs. male instructor higher, regardless of perceived gender. MacNell et al.’s study is a real-life demonstration that conclusions based on extremely small sample-sized studies are unwarranted and uninterpretable.
在一项被广泛引用和广泛讨论的研究中,MacNell等人(2015)[1]研究了一名女性和一名男性讲师的SET评分,他们分别教授同一在线课程的两个部分,一个部分使用他们的真实性别,另一个部分使用假/异性。MacNell等人得出结论,学生对感知到的女性教师的评价比感知到的男性教师更苛刻,这表明对感知到的女性教师存在性别偏见。Boring, Ottoboni, and Stark(2016)[2]重新分析了MacNell等人的数据,并证实了他们的结论。然而,MacNell等人的研究设计存在根本性缺陷。首先,MacNell等人的样本规模非常小,从8到12名学生不等。其次,MacNell等人只纳入了一名女性和一名男性教员。第三,麦克内尔等人的发现依赖于三个异常值——三个不快乐的学生(都是在被认为是女性的条件下),他们在所有或几乎所有SET项目上给了他们的导师最低的评分。我们重新分析了MacNell等人的数据,包括和不包括三个异常值。我们的分析表明,对女性教师的性别偏见消失了。相反,学生们对实际的女性导师的评价高于男性导师,而不考虑他们的性别认知。MacNell等人的研究是一个真实的证明,基于极小样本的研究得出的结论是没有根据和不可解释的。