| Literature DB >> 28188281 |
Katelyn M Cooper1, Brian Haney1, Anna Krieg1, Sara E Brownell2.
Abstract
Learning student names has been promoted as an inclusive classroom practice, but it is unknown whether students value having their names known by an instructor. We explored this question in the context of a high-enrollment active-learning undergraduate biology course. Using surveys and semistructured interviews, we investigated whether students perceived that instructors know their names, the importance of instructors knowing their names, and how instructors learned their names. We found that, while only 20% of students perceived their names were known in previous high-enrollment biology classes, 78% of students perceived that an instructor of this course knew their names. However, instructors only knew 53% of names, indicating that instructors do not have to know student names in order for students to perceive that their names are known. Using grounded theory, we identified nine reasons why students feel that having their names known is important. When we asked students how they perceived instructors learned their names, the most common response was instructor use of name tents during in-class discussion. These findings suggest that students can benefit from perceiving that instructors know their names and name tents could be a relatively easy way for students to think that instructors know their names.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28188281 PMCID: PMC5332051 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.16-08-0265
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
FIGURE 1.Example name tents. Students use markers to write their first names on a folded 8 × 10 inch piece of card stock.
Results of models that explore whether student demographic characteristics predict (a) whether students perceive that it is likely that instructors of previous large-enrollment biology courses knew their names, (b) whether students perceive that instructors of this large-enrollment biology course know their names, and (c) whether an instructor of this large-enrollment biology course actually knew the student’s namea
| a. Likely to report name previously known | b. Student perceives name is known by instructor | c. Student name actually known by instructor | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Identity | Regression coefficient ± SE | Regression coefficient ± SE | Regression coefficient ± SE | |||
| Intercept | −4.0 ± 1.4 | 0.13 ± 1.18 | 0.912 | 0.10 ± 0.45 | 0.674 | |
| Prior GPA | 0.77 ± 0.40 | 0.05302 | 0.46 ± 0.35 | 0.197 | 0.01 ± 0.01 | 0.267 |
| Gender: female | −1.05 ± 0.46 | −0.12 ± 0.43 | 0.794 | −0.35 ± 0.36 | 0.321 | |
| Race/ethnicity: underrepresented minority | 0.24 ± 0.56 | 0.66732 | −0.65 ± 0.46 | 0.159 | −0.39 ± 0.41 | 0.334 |
| College generation status: first-generation | 0.80 ± 0.67 | 0.23605 | −0.03 ± 0.48 | 0.947 | −0.19 ± 0.40 | 0.637 |
aThe first model explores whether students’ prior academic ability, gender, race/ethnicity, or college generation status predicts whether they perceived it was likely or unlikely that instructors in previous large-enrollment biology courses knew their names. Model a: name.previously.known ∼ prior.gpa + gender + race + college.gen. The second model explores whether students’ prior academic ability, gender, race/ethnicity, or college generation status predicts whether they perceive that an instructor in this class knew their names. Model b: instructor.perception ∼ prior.gpa + gender + race + college.gen. The third model explores whether a student’s prior academic ability, gender, race/ethnicity, or college generation status predicted whether an instructor actually knew their names. Model c: name.actually.known ∼ prior.gpa + gender + race + college.gen.
bBolded p values are significant.
FIGURE 2.(a) Considering all previous large-enrollment biology courses that students had been enrolled in, 125 students (79.6%) reported that it was unlikely that an instructor knew their names during a course, and only 32 students (20.4%) reported that it was likely that an instructor knew their names during a course. (b) In considering this course, 136 students (78.2%) perceived that an instructor of this course knew their names, and 38 students (21.8%) reported that an instructor of the course did not know their names.
FIGURE 3.Of the 174 students who completed the postcourse survey, 87 students (50.0%) correctly perceived that an instructor of the course knew their names. An additional 49 students (28.1%) perceived that an instructor of the course knew their names, but their names were not actually known by instructors. Five students (2.9%) incorrectly perceived that their names were not known by an instructor, when they actually were, and 33 students (19.0%) correctly perceived that their names were not known by an instructor of the course.
FIGURE 4.Student responses to the question “Is it important that professors know your name?” Eighty-five percent of students responded that it was important to them than an instructor knows their names.
Student perceive that having their names known by an instructor is important to them for nine distinct reasons that fall into three larger categories, including affects student attitudes about the course, affects student self-reported behavior, and affects how the student perceives the course or the instructor
| Why it is important that instructors learn your name? | % Student responses ( | Example student quote | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Affects student attitudes about the course | |||
| Student feels more valued | 30.6 | “A professor knowing your name makes you feel as if you’re a part of the process, rather than just being swallowed by it.”—Elaine | “I feel like I’m just a face in the crowd most of the time, even in classes where the teacher is really excited about teaching and helping students understand. Knowing my name makes me feel more noticed and welcome.”—Jamie |
| Student feels more invested in the course | 19.4 | “Instructors knowing your name can be rather inspiring for a student to want to achieve more in class.”—Graham | “When I feel that personal connection with the instructors it makes me want to do better in the class as well, it’s almost as if I’m extra accountable.”—Lloyd |
Percent of students who brought up instructors knowing their names in response to interview questions about affective components of the course
| Interview question | Percentage of interviewees who mentioned an instructor knowing their names ( |
|---|---|
| Do you feel that the instructors care about your success and why? | 47.1 |
| Do you think that the instructors of this course built relationships with students? If so, how? | 73.6 |
| Do you think that the instructors of this course built a classroom community? If so, how? | 20.6 |
| Do you think that the instructors of this course structured the class so all individuals could succeed? If so, how? | 2.9 |
| Do you feel that instructors care about your success after this course and why? | 2.9 |
Students perceived that instructors learned their names in a variety of ways, both inside and outside the classroom
| Student perception of how instructors learned their names | % Responses of students with name known ( | Example student response | |
|---|---|---|---|
| How students perceived names were learned inside the classroom | |||
| Name tents | 43.6 | “I was texting my mom one day in class and the instructor asked me to put my phone away. I think the instructor read my name tent at that moment and remembered me.”—Holly | “The instructors were very persistent in using the yellow name tents and would use them whenever they had the chance. They made an effort to learn names by using the name cards.”—Daniel |
| Interactions during class | 34.6 | “By personally coming and talking to us during class participation (active learning).”—Arianne | “One instructor knows my name but I’m not sure why because, I always forget my name tent. She talks to me in class though, so maybe that’s why.”—Laura |
| Interactions during recitation | 12.0 | “One instructor would come over during recitation and address me by my name. This happened a few times, which made it more personal rather than just reading it off a piece of paper.”—Annie | “The instructor would talk to me in recitation and would remember who I am from those instances.”—Kaylie |
| Interactions before or after class | 11.3 | “Talk to and see the instructor before class.”—Jorge | “One of the instructors took the time before class to talk to me once and see how my semester was going.”— Bailey |
| Sitting near the front of the classroom | 6.0 | “I sat up front on the very first day of class.”—Eugene | “I sat at the front of the class most of the semester…”—Whitney |