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2009
DOI: 10.1080/03634520903131154
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A Meta-Analytical Review of Teacher Credibility and its Associations with Teacher Behaviors and Student Outcomes

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Cited by 123 publications
(110 citation statements)
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References 70 publications
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“…An additional element may include charisma, as trust may often develop from less cognitive and more affective, or emotional, sources. Charismatic leaders and teachers, for example, often generate higher levels of trust in their followers (or students) than do otherwise competent people lacking this quality (Dirks and Ferrin 2002;Finn et al 2009;Gillespie and Mann 2004). Each of these characteristics (ability, integrity, benevolence, and charisma) may have differential importance to different people in different situations.…”
Section: Defining Trust and The Components Of Trust Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…An additional element may include charisma, as trust may often develop from less cognitive and more affective, or emotional, sources. Charismatic leaders and teachers, for example, often generate higher levels of trust in their followers (or students) than do otherwise competent people lacking this quality (Dirks and Ferrin 2002;Finn et al 2009;Gillespie and Mann 2004). Each of these characteristics (ability, integrity, benevolence, and charisma) may have differential importance to different people in different situations.…”
Section: Defining Trust and The Components Of Trust Theorymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Moreover, the lack of attention to the characteristics and delivery styles of educators in favor of content-based guidelines ignores whole bodies of literature within the fields of formal education and communication (e.g. Finn et al 2009). As such, additional attention to these elements may be warranted within both EE research and practice.…”
Section: Insights On Effective Ee Practicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interestingly, this particular theme is not overtly present within the NAAEE guidelines, nor was it explicitly built into any research designs encountered in this review. The formal education literature, however, has long considered teachers' verbal and non-verbal communication styles to be prominent determinants of student outcomes (Finn et al 2009). Moreover, a recent study conducted by the first two authors of this article revealed that certain characteristics of educators (interpretive rangers in the National Park Service in this case), in particular their comfort, eloquence, apparent knowledge, passion, sincerity, and charisma, were strongly associated with more positive visitor outcomes.…”
Section: Insights On Effective Ee Practicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Most relevant here, students who perceive their instructor as more credible also report greater affective learning; that is, they are more satisfied with their learning experience and report a more positive attitude toward the content and course [20]. In one meta-analytic approach [22], credibility accounted for approximately 20% of the variance in outcomes such as affect. Typically, all three facets are included in correlational studies of instructor credibility.…”
Section: B Credibilitymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Current theorizing in communication research positions credibility in two ways: as an outcome of teacher actions or attitudes, and as a predictor of student outcomes [22]. Thus, we propose that credibility acts as an interim step between activities and facework and satisfaction:…”
Section: Faceworkmentioning
confidence: 99%