Title: Will Online Social Presence be Related to Gender?
1Will Online Social Presence be Related to Gender?
- Chih-Hsiung Tu, Ph.D.
- Northern Arizona University
- Cherng-Jyh Yen, Ph.D.
- George Washington University
2Purposes
- Assess the relationship between gender online
social presence empirically - Conclude
- Online social presence is not related to gender
- Gender cannot serve as an effective predictor of
online social presence
3Online Social Presence
- A vital affective learning factor that influences
online interaction (Gunawardena McIsaac, 2003) - The degree of Feeling, Perception, Reaction of
being connected by computer-mediated
communication (CMC) to another intellectual
entity (Tu McIsaac, 2002) - Online SP not supported physical presence
4Impacts
- High degree of SP will initiate maintain a
greater quantity of interactions promote deeper
interactions (Polhemus, Shih, Swan, 2001) - SP has positive impacts on cognitive contents
(Rourke et al., 2002 Stacey, 2002) - Lack of SP leads to
- a high level of frustration, an attitude critical
of the instructor's effectiveness (Rifkind, 1992) - a lower level of affective learning (Hample
Dallinger, 1995)
54 Dimensions of SP (Tu McIsaac, 2002)
Interactivity Collaborative activities in which
learners are engaged the communication styles
used by CMC users
Social Context Constructed from the learners
characteristics their perceptions of the CMC
environment.
Social Presence
Online Communication Refers to the attributes,
application, perception of the language used
online.
Privacy Quality and sense of being secluded from
the presence or view of others.
6Online Gender Communications
- Men tend to dominate the communications in FTF
encounters at the expense lower social presence
for women - Similar phenomena between men and women were
observed in the CMC environment (Blocher Tu, in
press)
7Online Gender Communications
- Women
- Seek harmonious social relationships, social
networks, and support to build intimacy and
rapport through more social-orientated processes
in the social context dimension - Use non-verbal cues to deliver their meaning in
online communications are more adept at
decoding non-verbal cues (Briton, Hall, (1995).
- Men
- more aggressive, argumentative, and
power-oriented (Soukup, 1999) - Work alone online
- may conflict with the social communication
customary for women - CMC
- less able or incapable of delivering non-verbal
cues, rendering interactivity between gender
communications more complicated.
8Participants
- Participants N 395
- Graduate programs, two four-year universities
- Respond to the Computer-Mediated Communication
Questionnaire (CMCQ) on a voluntary basis - Female students (n 278, 70.4)
- Males students (n 117, 29.6)
9Measurements of Variables
- CMCQ (Yen Tu, 2006)
- 24 test items
- five-point Liker scale (1 strongly disagree 2
disagree 3 uncertain 4 agree 5 strongly
agree) - Results in the test validation study (Yen Tu,
2006) - 12 test items were selected to indicate 4
first-order factors - Social context, privacy, interactivity, online
communication - Each respondent would be assigned a total score,
ranging from 12 to 60 - Support to the score internal consistency,
content validity - The predictor variable, gender, was measured by
the test item in the second part of the CMCQ
asking explicitly of the gender of the respondent
10Data Analysis
- Histograms, descriptive statistics of means,
and standard deviations (Hinkle, Wiersma Jurs,
2003) - A simple regression analysis with the categorical
predictor variable (Pedhazur, 1997) - A two-tailed t test of the regression coefficient
- Squared multiple correlation coefficient (R2)
(Pedhazur, 1997) - Adjusted squared multiple correlation
- Assumption of normality was assessed by the
normal Q-Q plots - Levenes test of equality of variance and the
scatterplot for the standardized residual scores
and the predicted scores of the criterion
variable checked
11Descriptive Statistics
- Online social presence scores male female
groups - Male (n 117) M 39.230 SD 4.938
- Female (n 278) M 38.241 SD 5.602
12Histograms M vs. F
The histograms of online social presence scores
for male female groups
13Normal Q-Q Plot M vs. F
14Homogeneity of variances
- Supported by the statistically nonsignificant
result in - Levenes test of equality of variance, F(1, .393)
1.636, p .202, - Configuration of the data points in the
scatterplot for the standardized residual scores
and the predicted scores
15Simple Regression
- With Dummy Coding for the Categorical Predictor
Variable - Group membership of different gender groups were
not statistically significant at the .05 level,
t(393) 1.659, p .098. - Observed differences between the means of online
social presence scores for those two gender
groups - not large enough to be deemed as nonzero
differences in the population. Accordingly,
online social presence was not predictable by
gender.
16Simple Regression
- Squared multiple correlation coefficient, .007
- indicated that there was less than 1 of
variation - Value of adjusted squared multiple correlation
coefficient .004. - The results suggested
- online social presence was unrelated to gender in
the population and were consistent with the
results of the aforementioned t test. - Gender couldnt serve as an effective predictor
of online social presence
17Discussions
- Levels of social presence between genders are not
significantly different. - Women perceive online SP equally to men
- Gender-related communication style differences
indicated that the current lean text-based
electronic communication systems tend to promote
a more direct report communication style. - Despite male communication styles may dominate
overpower a womens ability to communicate, women
perceived their online communication styles
equally as comfortable as men in this study.
18Discussions
- Womens communication styles
- may be even more effective than mens in the CMC
venue in certain specific online communication
environments (Savicki, Kelley, Lingenfelter,
1996 Savicki,, Kelley, Oesterreich, 1998) - Female only groups
- described as having high levels of satisfaction
because they used more coalition language
self-disclosure, and personal opinion statements - Male only groups
- demonstrated the opposite style and were labeled
low group development - Both genders to be aware of, monitor, perhaps
strategically utilize communication styles that
increase social presence. - Both gender should be empowered be able to
apply different communication styles for
different communication purposes
19Discussions
- Illogical that both genders utilize the same CMC
strategies since SP is measured by the perception
of the learners. - Additional critical variables should be examined
compared - computer aptitudes, CMC experience, age,
ethnicity - before declaring that gender is an insignificant
factor in online communication. - Future studies examine
- the multiple relationships between/among these
additional variables to attain comprehensive
understanding of social presence
20Conclusions
- Technology may shape human learning in online
learning in both genders however, - Online learners can be empowered by effective
online instructional communication to further
shape online communication technologies.