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Articles

The impact of student nationality and course type on perceptions of teacher credibility

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Pages 342-356 | Published online: 01 Oct 2020
 

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this investigation was two-fold: (1) to ascertain the extent to which course type (face-to-face or distance) affects instructor credibility; and (2) to examine whether these perceptions differ among New Zealand born and China-born students studying in New Zealand. Using a 2 × 2 factorial MANOVA, findings among New Zealand born and Chinese international students studying in New Zealand revealed that face-to-face students rated teachers as significantly higher on all three aspects of credibility: caring, competence, and trustworthiness. Results also revealed Chinese students rated teachers as significantly higher on all three aspects of credibility. Implications, limitations, and suggestions for future research are discussed.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Notes

1. The New Zealand university system is based on a 3-year undergraduate degree.

2. During the review process, a reviewer requested information on the extent to which teacher credibility would differ based on a participant’s level in school. As this was not part of the original research question, this result is added as a footnote. For Chinese students, there was a significant linear trend, F(3, 288) = 4.42, p =.005, η2 =.04, indicating that as educational level increased, perception of teacher caring decreased. For New Zealand students, there was no significant trend, F(3, 484) =.20, p =.90, η2 =.00.

3. For Chinese students, there was a significant linear trend, F(3, 288) = 3.57, p =.01, η2 =.04, indicating that as educational level increased, perception of teacher competence decreased. For New Zealand students, there was no significant trend, F(3, 484) =.68, p =.57, η2 =.00.

4. For Chinese students, there was a significant linear trend, F(3, 288) = 5.08, p =.002, η2 =.05, indicating that as educational level increased, perception of teacher trustworthiness decreased. For New Zealand students, there was no significant trend, F(3, 484) = 1.81 p =.15, η2 =.01.

Additional information

Notes on contributors

Stephen Croucher

Stephen Croucher is a Professor and Head of the School of Communication, Journalism, and Marketing. His primary research area is cross-cultural and organisational communication.

Stephanie Kelly

Stephanie Kelly is an Associate Professor. Her primary research area is instructional communication.

Mal Green

Mal Green is a doctoral candidate. His primary research area is organisational communication.

Erika Pearson

Erika Pearson is a Senior Lecturer. Her primary research area is in new media and communication technology.

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