You May Call Me Professor: Professor Form of Address in Email Communication and College Student Reactions to Not Knowing What to Call Their Professors

This experimental study tested whether a professor’s form of address (FOA) and email signature influenced students’ perceptions of the professor’s credibility, approachability, and likability. Guided by communication accommodation theory, the study investigated the likelihood that students would rec...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Grace M. Hildenbrand, Evan K. Perrault, Taylor M. Devine
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Central States Communication Association 2020-06-01
Series:Journal of Communication Pedagogy
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/jcp/vol3/iss1/7/
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spelling doaj-8df676e5a14943a4890975df8c9b1c522021-04-02T14:38:10ZengCentral States Communication AssociationJournal of Communication Pedagogy2578-25682640-45242020-06-013829910.31446/JCP.2020.08 You May Call Me Professor: Professor Form of Address in Email Communication and College Student Reactions to Not Knowing What to Call Their ProfessorsGrace M. Hildenbrand0https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0250-3053Evan K. Perrault1https://orcid.org/0000-0002-3227-1804Taylor M. Devine2https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4447-9511Purdue UniversityPurdue UniversityPurdue UniversityThis experimental study tested whether a professor’s form of address (FOA) and email signature influenced students’ perceptions of the professor’s credibility, approachability, and likability. Guided by communication accommodation theory, the study investigated the likelihood that students would reciprocate a professor’s FOA in email communication. Participants were randomly assigned to one of seven conditions varying by professor FOA (doctor, professor, first name) and email signature (present or not), with a signature only control condition. Results indicated students were more likely to reciprocate the FOA when an email signature was not present. Open-ended responses suggested students perceive instructors more positively when instructors specify a FOA and feel anxious and uncertain when professors do not specify a FOA.https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/jcp/vol3/iss1/7/form of addresssinstructional communicationemailinstructor-student relationshipcommunication accomidation theoryprofessor
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Grace M. Hildenbrand
Evan K. Perrault
Taylor M. Devine
spellingShingle Grace M. Hildenbrand
Evan K. Perrault
Taylor M. Devine
You May Call Me Professor: Professor Form of Address in Email Communication and College Student Reactions to Not Knowing What to Call Their Professors
Journal of Communication Pedagogy
form of addresss
instructional communication
email
instructor-student relationship
communication accomidation theory
professor
author_facet Grace M. Hildenbrand
Evan K. Perrault
Taylor M. Devine
author_sort Grace M. Hildenbrand
title You May Call Me Professor: Professor Form of Address in Email Communication and College Student Reactions to Not Knowing What to Call Their Professors
title_short You May Call Me Professor: Professor Form of Address in Email Communication and College Student Reactions to Not Knowing What to Call Their Professors
title_full You May Call Me Professor: Professor Form of Address in Email Communication and College Student Reactions to Not Knowing What to Call Their Professors
title_fullStr You May Call Me Professor: Professor Form of Address in Email Communication and College Student Reactions to Not Knowing What to Call Their Professors
title_full_unstemmed You May Call Me Professor: Professor Form of Address in Email Communication and College Student Reactions to Not Knowing What to Call Their Professors
title_sort you may call me professor: professor form of address in email communication and college student reactions to not knowing what to call their professors
publisher Central States Communication Association
series Journal of Communication Pedagogy
issn 2578-2568
2640-4524
publishDate 2020-06-01
description This experimental study tested whether a professor’s form of address (FOA) and email signature influenced students’ perceptions of the professor’s credibility, approachability, and likability. Guided by communication accommodation theory, the study investigated the likelihood that students would reciprocate a professor’s FOA in email communication. Participants were randomly assigned to one of seven conditions varying by professor FOA (doctor, professor, first name) and email signature (present or not), with a signature only control condition. Results indicated students were more likely to reciprocate the FOA when an email signature was not present. Open-ended responses suggested students perceive instructors more positively when instructors specify a FOA and feel anxious and uncertain when professors do not specify a FOA.
topic form of addresss
instructional communication
email
instructor-student relationship
communication accomidation theory
professor
url https://scholarworks.wmich.edu/jcp/vol3/iss1/7/
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AT evankperrault youmaycallmeprofessorprofessorformofaddressinemailcommunicationandcollegestudentreactionstonotknowingwhattocalltheirprofessors
AT taylormdevine youmaycallmeprofessorprofessorformofaddressinemailcommunicationandcollegestudentreactionstonotknowingwhattocalltheirprofessors
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