Popular Culture Review Vol. 23, No. 1, Winter 2012 | Page 90

Popular Culture Review 86 or not I wore a tie. Then I began compounding the exogenous variation (that is, my attire)—^partly to make the exam question more interesting, partly from growing curiosity about the explanatory power of attire, and partly, frankly, on larks. In later semesters, I alternated wearing a necktie with a solid-colored shirt, not wearing a tie but with a similar shirt, and wearing a floral-print button-up. On several occasions, I even wore the necktie with a floral-print shirt. For each of the lectures where data was collected, I did my best—while delivering a lecture, managing a classroom of students, and, particularly in the earlier of those eleven courses, learning how to deliver a lecture and manage a classroom—to record simple counts of a small number of student behaviors that I considered at the time to be inappropriate but which I now recognize as variable reactions of dissonance and avoidance. In particular, I counted how many students each class period left the classroom (whether for the restroom or for the duration of the period; I did not distinguish), how many read a newspaper (particularly common at the first institution where I taught), and how many fell asleep (more common at the later two institutions). Ultimately, I observed a total 1,501 attending students and recorded 42 instances of students leaving, 36 of students reading, and 9 of students falling asleep. Table 1: Instances Observed Instance 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Institution A A A A B C D D D D D # Students 12 12 24 24 19 46 27 25 25 24 24 # Days 8 8 8 8 4 8 4 4 4 4 4 Although I had whimsically proposed to students on those first two examinations that the exogenous conditions of my attire might make a difference, I was surprised at the extent to which they make a systematic difference. I lumped the three counts (leaving, reading, and sleeping) as a composite measure; calculated, for each class day measured, that lump sum as a percentage of students present; and then averaged those percentages according to the exogenous variation (such as whether or not I wore a tie). As Table 2 below shows, the percentages were more than twice as high (11.5% vs. 5.0%) when I wore a necktie as when I did not. In other words, wearing a tie more than doubled the incidence of behaviors I had hoped to avoid or at least reduce. Wearing a floral-print shirt was associated with a small (but statistically significant) reduction over wearing a solid-colored shirt without a tie (4.5% vs. 5.9%), and a larger reduction when the floral-print condition is compared with the conditions of a solid-colored shirt both with and without a tie (4.5% vs. 8.7%). The highest incidence of problematic behavior occurred on the two dates when I wore both a floral-print shirt and a tie (12.5%)—which, I soon realized.