ASIAN IMAGES PORTRAYED IN THE WEB SITES OF U.S. HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS: PROPORTIONALITY, STEREOTYPICAL STATUS AND POWER POSITIONS

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Wang, Xiaopeng
Language:English
Published: Ohio University / OhioLINK 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1186543351
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spelling ndltd-OhioLink-oai-etd.ohiolink.edu-ohiou11865433512021-08-03T05:45:25Z ASIAN IMAGES PORTRAYED IN THE WEB SITES OF U.S. HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS: PROPORTIONALITY, STEREOTYPICAL STATUS AND POWER POSITIONS Wang, Xiaopeng Mass Communications Asian American stereotype World Wide Web college admissions <p>This study examines the portrayals of Asians in U.S. college and university Web sites. By analyzing the representation of Asian American and Asian students, this study assesses the proportionality and stereotypes of Asians in an educational environment, interprets the social implications and sheds lights on ethnic representations, visual consumptions and the emerging higher education marketing in the Internet era.</p> <p>A purposive sample of 265 U.S. colleges and universities were selected for a quantitative content analysis, including 257 four-year-above accredited institutions (from California, Florida, Michigan and Maine) and eight Ivy League universities. The analysis identified 378 Asian models from 8,319 human models presented on the homepages and admissions homepages of the sampled college and university Web sites. The proportion of Asian images on a Web site and the portrayals of Asian models’ status and power position were the focus of this study.</p> <p>Results show that Asian American and Asian students were under-presented on the Web compared to their proportion in the student body, disregarding the statistical error caused by two definitions of Asians. In contrast, African Americans were proportionately represented. Instead of being stereotypically portrayed as passive, submissive and devoted to work, Asians appeared neutral in terms of status and power positions. However, genders differed significantly in representing stereotypes of Asians. Asian females appeared more active in interacting with others and more often to be the visual focus than Asian males. On the contrary, Asian males were more likely than Asian females to be appearing alone, submissive, as a background role and as an action receiver.</p> <p>This study indicates that Asian Americans and Asians are of less ideological, political and social importance compared to the non-ethnic majority and other ethnicities, whereas the improving portrayals of Asians may serve as part of the marketing strategies to positively influence prospective students’ choices in higher education. Social norms and ideologies influence gender images, which further complicates the portrayals of Asians. Images of an ethnic minority mirror marketers’ utilitarian strategies and social ideologies. With the changing of markets and society, Asian images transform accordingly.</p> 2007-09-27 English text Ohio University / OhioLINK http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1186543351 http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1186543351 unrestricted This thesis or dissertation is protected by copyright: all rights reserved. It may not be copied or redistributed beyond the terms of applicable copyright laws.
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Mass Communications
Asian American
stereotype
World Wide Web
college admissions
spellingShingle Mass Communications
Asian American
stereotype
World Wide Web
college admissions
Wang, Xiaopeng
ASIAN IMAGES PORTRAYED IN THE WEB SITES OF U.S. HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS: PROPORTIONALITY, STEREOTYPICAL STATUS AND POWER POSITIONS
author Wang, Xiaopeng
author_facet Wang, Xiaopeng
author_sort Wang, Xiaopeng
title ASIAN IMAGES PORTRAYED IN THE WEB SITES OF U.S. HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS: PROPORTIONALITY, STEREOTYPICAL STATUS AND POWER POSITIONS
title_short ASIAN IMAGES PORTRAYED IN THE WEB SITES OF U.S. HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS: PROPORTIONALITY, STEREOTYPICAL STATUS AND POWER POSITIONS
title_full ASIAN IMAGES PORTRAYED IN THE WEB SITES OF U.S. HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS: PROPORTIONALITY, STEREOTYPICAL STATUS AND POWER POSITIONS
title_fullStr ASIAN IMAGES PORTRAYED IN THE WEB SITES OF U.S. HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS: PROPORTIONALITY, STEREOTYPICAL STATUS AND POWER POSITIONS
title_full_unstemmed ASIAN IMAGES PORTRAYED IN THE WEB SITES OF U.S. HIGHER EDUCATION INSTITUTIONS: PROPORTIONALITY, STEREOTYPICAL STATUS AND POWER POSITIONS
title_sort asian images portrayed in the web sites of u.s. higher education institutions: proportionality, stereotypical status and power positions
publisher Ohio University / OhioLINK
publishDate 2007
url http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ohiou1186543351
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