Popular Culture Review Vol. 23, No. 1, Winter 2012 | Page 87

Professor Dress: Consequences of Cultural Distance in the Classroom The dress code of professors, such as it is, is presented in popular culture as somewhere between semi-formal and aloof Despite temporal variations—from black robes to business suits, and patched corduroy elbows to black turtlenecks—there is something approaching a constant: We are led to understand that academics distinguish themselves as interesting at least partly through their clothes. Even elementary school faculty are said to have a particular look, such that “clothes make the teacher” (Weber and Mitchell, 1995:54-71). The attire of faculty—and particularly how professors dress in the classroom—has been linked primarily to how they are perceived. But less research has examined how these variations are reacted to behaviorally. And indeed, it is (or should be) student behavior rather than perceptions that guide our choices and, in some instances, policies. This article will review the literature on attire, summarize data from an initially inadvertent experiment, and provide concluding thoughts about how the physical materials we don may offset consequences of the cultural and virtual changes that presently complicate teaching and learning. Making Teacher Attire Important There are increasing concerns about learning outcomes as well as behavioral problems in schools ranging from bullying to violence. All have been tied to attire. At the extreme, some “school shootings” have been both explained and reacted to with variations in attire (Ogle et al., 2002). Meanwhile, school uniforms have been credited with dramatic reductions in school violence (King, 1998). At far less extremes of student behavior, but to a much greater degree in both popular and academic attention, behavioral conformity has been sought through regularity of attire. One way in which some schools, communities, and cultures have attempted to reign in and normalize student behavior has been through dress codes. The expectation is that by standardizing student attire, behavioral differences are both minimized (through a socialization of similarity) and more easily identified (in the sense that other variation, particularly gangrelated clothing, is minimized). Within limits of case law and common sense, the expected result is “a better school environment” in all regards (Stover, 1990). Cross-culturally, there is some evidence that regulating student attire is associated with behavioral regularity (McVeigh, 1997). A cross-national study similarly concluded that attire (among other variables) may play an important part in the organizational culture of educational institutions, independent of local or national culture (Dedoussis, 2004). However, as one review of the literature