participation overall, a bias toward volunteers with the quickest response time
early in the class contributed to a growing hierarchy in participation overall.
50
These results suggest that women might be disadvantaged in classrooms where
teachers rely heavily on volunteers (a finding that, as we will see, has been repli-
cated in multiple studies and settings).
A number of other observational studies have found similarly high participa-
tion rates (especially where students volunteer to speak) and frequent interrup-
tions on the part of male students when compared with females.
51
In survey studies
of college teaching, male students report higher rates of talking than do women,
and these reported rates of participation and interruption go up in classes taught
by women.
52
At the same time, a number of these studies have indicated that classes
taught by women might be more egalitarian in gendered dimensions of overall
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