Student engagement has rapidly developed a central place in the quality agenda of Australian universities since the introduction of the Australasian Survey of Student Engagement (AUSSE). The AUSSE is based on one developed in the USA. The main arguments given for adopting this survey in Australia are that it provides a valid instrument for measuring engagement and that it enables international comparisons. However, the survey instrument and scales have been adopted with little scrutiny of these arguments. This paper examines these arguments by considering different perspectives of engagement, examining the importance of contextual differences and evaluating the AUSSE engagement scales in the light of both. The paper concludes that the AUSSE...
Australia needs a robust survey instrument for measuring \u27student engagement\u27 writes Dr Hamish...
Student engagement is a pivotal contributor to academic achievement, retention, and well-being, and ...
A key determinant of the new relationship between students and universities in Australia is the chan...
Student engagement has rapidly developed a central place in the quality agenda of Australian univers...
The Australasian Survey of Student Engagement (AUSSE) provides data for each institution on student ...
This showcase will describe an institutional research project aimed at investigating students\u27 on...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Studies in Higher Educ...
This study explores the relationship between satisfaction and engagement survey items through an ins...
As part of the REACT research team, students from Newman University embarked on a two-year research ...
The terms school or task engagement are often used to refer to such affective responses. While seve...
Student engagement is a slippery concept. Internationally there is wide disagreement about how it sh...
Press releases concerning the Australasian Survey of Student Engagement (AUSSE) results warn that un...
This paper examines factors that formed the features of the concept of the National Survey of Studen...
This paper reports on seven calibrated scales of student engagement emerging from a large‐scale stud...
Realising the benefits of Australia’s world-class research system requires translation of its output...
Australia needs a robust survey instrument for measuring \u27student engagement\u27 writes Dr Hamish...
Student engagement is a pivotal contributor to academic achievement, retention, and well-being, and ...
A key determinant of the new relationship between students and universities in Australia is the chan...
Student engagement has rapidly developed a central place in the quality agenda of Australian univers...
The Australasian Survey of Student Engagement (AUSSE) provides data for each institution on student ...
This showcase will describe an institutional research project aimed at investigating students\u27 on...
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Studies in Higher Educ...
This study explores the relationship between satisfaction and engagement survey items through an ins...
As part of the REACT research team, students from Newman University embarked on a two-year research ...
The terms school or task engagement are often used to refer to such affective responses. While seve...
Student engagement is a slippery concept. Internationally there is wide disagreement about how it sh...
Press releases concerning the Australasian Survey of Student Engagement (AUSSE) results warn that un...
This paper examines factors that formed the features of the concept of the National Survey of Studen...
This paper reports on seven calibrated scales of student engagement emerging from a large‐scale stud...
Realising the benefits of Australia’s world-class research system requires translation of its output...
Australia needs a robust survey instrument for measuring \u27student engagement\u27 writes Dr Hamish...
Student engagement is a pivotal contributor to academic achievement, retention, and well-being, and ...
A key determinant of the new relationship between students and universities in Australia is the chan...