This study explores dissatisfaction and neutrality metrics from 12 years of a national-level undergraduate student survey. The notion of dissatisfaction is much less prevalent in the narratives surrounding student survey outcomes, and the underpinning metrics are seldom considered. This is despite an increasingly vociferous debate about ‘value for money’ of higher education and the positioning of students as consumers in a marketised sector. We used machine learning methods to explore over 2.7 million national survey outcomes from 154 institutions to describe year-on-year stability in the survey items that best predicted dissatisfaction and neutrality, together with their similarity to known metric predictors of satisfaction. The widely pub...
Higher Education (HE), once the prerogative of a tiny elite, is now accessible to larger numbers of ...
One could be excused for failing to recognise today’s universities as the inheritors of the global h...
This article represents a cross-sectional study of undergraduate students across two North West Univ...
This study explores dissatisfaction and neutrality metrics from 12 years of a national-level undergr...
The purpose of this study is to use machine learning and exploratory data analysis to interrogate pa...
Many countries use national-level surveys to capture student opinions about their university experie...
The revamp of the National Student Survey (NSS) has led to the elimination of the final ‘overall sat...
This study explores the relationship between satisfaction and engagement survey items through an ins...
The increasing prominence of neoliberal agendas in international higher education has led to greater...
The UK National Student Survey (NSS) represents a major resource, never previously used in the econo...
Taking the UK National Student Survey (NSS) as a case study of student evaluations of teaching (SET)...
This report describes how the National Student Survey (NSS) is currently impacting on the environmen...
© 2015 UCU Institutions are understandably interested in the profile of their own reputations based ...
Has the National Student Survey ‘customerized’ the UK’s university students? This article examines t...
AbstractThe UK National Student Survey (NSS) represents a major resource, never previously used in t...
Higher Education (HE), once the prerogative of a tiny elite, is now accessible to larger numbers of ...
One could be excused for failing to recognise today’s universities as the inheritors of the global h...
This article represents a cross-sectional study of undergraduate students across two North West Univ...
This study explores dissatisfaction and neutrality metrics from 12 years of a national-level undergr...
The purpose of this study is to use machine learning and exploratory data analysis to interrogate pa...
Many countries use national-level surveys to capture student opinions about their university experie...
The revamp of the National Student Survey (NSS) has led to the elimination of the final ‘overall sat...
This study explores the relationship between satisfaction and engagement survey items through an ins...
The increasing prominence of neoliberal agendas in international higher education has led to greater...
The UK National Student Survey (NSS) represents a major resource, never previously used in the econo...
Taking the UK National Student Survey (NSS) as a case study of student evaluations of teaching (SET)...
This report describes how the National Student Survey (NSS) is currently impacting on the environmen...
© 2015 UCU Institutions are understandably interested in the profile of their own reputations based ...
Has the National Student Survey ‘customerized’ the UK’s university students? This article examines t...
AbstractThe UK National Student Survey (NSS) represents a major resource, never previously used in t...
Higher Education (HE), once the prerogative of a tiny elite, is now accessible to larger numbers of ...
One could be excused for failing to recognise today’s universities as the inheritors of the global h...
This article represents a cross-sectional study of undergraduate students across two North West Univ...