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Education Students as Consumers: Choice of a University Education
Author(s) -
Beverly J. Pain
Publication year - 1986
Publication title -
canadian journal of higher education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2293-6602
pISSN - 0316-1218
DOI - 10.47678/cjhe.v16i2.182995
Subject(s) - higher education , psychology , institutional research , investment (military) , consumer economics , medical education , academic year , mathematics education , marketing , economics education , business , political science , medicine , primary education , politics , law
This study examined the university student-institutional relationship within a consumer behavior framework, which portrays the student as a consumer of the educational services offered by a university. The research examined some of the characteristics of full-time university students registered in the College of Education, University of Saskatchewan, and selected aspects of the decision process employed by these students when they made the decision to attend university for the academic year under study. Students did search for information, with the amount of search declining from first through fourth year. University students were the most used source of information. The most used evaluative criteria were the college program and previous investment in the program. No students felt that someone else had made the decision for them and approximately 68% were satisfied, at the end of the academic year, with their decision to attend.

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