Students studying at universities in England have been defined as customers by the government since the introduction of student tuition fees (Dearing et al., 1997). Although this approach has been rejected by educators, there is a lack of empirical evidence about the extent to which students express a consumer orientation on academic performance. These issues were examined in the current study by surveying 608 undergraduates at Higher Education Institutions in England about their consumer attitudes and behaviours, learner identity, grade goal and academic performance. The analysis revealed that consumer orientation mediated traditional relationships between learner identity and grade goal on academic performance, and found that a higher con...
The idea that students might be treated as customers triggers academics’ antipathy, which in turn ca...
The paper presents contemporary discussion about consumerism in academia. Commercialization of highe...
This paper offers a reconsideration of the student as consumer. Through playfully finding similarity...
Students studying at universities in England have been defined as customers by the government since ...
There is a great deal of discussion in the academic literature around how the current conditions in ...
The marketization of higher education and focus on graduate employability and earnings data has rais...
There is a great deal of discussion in the academic literature around how the current conditions in ...
Student engagement may be compromised by students identifying as consumers of their higher education...
Given the rapid growth of the higher education sector in UK and the challenges it has faced in the p...
Student consumerism in the Higher Education (HE) sector continues to stimulate critical academic com...
This paper posits that the ‘student as customer’ model has a negative impact upon the academic leade...
Bunce discusses the impact of students being defined as ‘consumers’ of their higher education. The c...
In recent years, two potentially conflicting discourses have come to dominate higher education, name...
It is now widely assumed in England – by academics and social commentators alike – that, as a result...
The literature review revealed two opposing views of the ‘student as customer’; either it is conside...
The idea that students might be treated as customers triggers academics’ antipathy, which in turn ca...
The paper presents contemporary discussion about consumerism in academia. Commercialization of highe...
This paper offers a reconsideration of the student as consumer. Through playfully finding similarity...
Students studying at universities in England have been defined as customers by the government since ...
There is a great deal of discussion in the academic literature around how the current conditions in ...
The marketization of higher education and focus on graduate employability and earnings data has rais...
There is a great deal of discussion in the academic literature around how the current conditions in ...
Student engagement may be compromised by students identifying as consumers of their higher education...
Given the rapid growth of the higher education sector in UK and the challenges it has faced in the p...
Student consumerism in the Higher Education (HE) sector continues to stimulate critical academic com...
This paper posits that the ‘student as customer’ model has a negative impact upon the academic leade...
Bunce discusses the impact of students being defined as ‘consumers’ of their higher education. The c...
In recent years, two potentially conflicting discourses have come to dominate higher education, name...
It is now widely assumed in England – by academics and social commentators alike – that, as a result...
The literature review revealed two opposing views of the ‘student as customer’; either it is conside...
The idea that students might be treated as customers triggers academics’ antipathy, which in turn ca...
The paper presents contemporary discussion about consumerism in academia. Commercialization of highe...
This paper offers a reconsideration of the student as consumer. Through playfully finding similarity...