Affiliation:
1. Newcastle University geoff.payne@ncl.ac.uk
Abstract
Most undergraduates’ main, hands-on involvement in student
engagement is completing satisfaction surveys, such as the U.K.
National Student Survey (NSS), whose findings make significant
contributions to university policy formation. It is therefore important
that these surveys produce reliable and valid data, but previous
and current NSS versions fail to do this. This article compares the
U.K.’s model of ‘satisfaction’ with that of the U.S. National Survey
of Student Engagement (NSSE). Whereas the NSS treats the student
as a passive consumer, the NSSE treats the student as an active participant
who shares personal liability for some of the educational
outcomes. The NSSE’s greater use of factual rather than opinion
questions, allowance for variation in types of students and student
effort, and wider interpretation of ‘student engagement’ are seen as
more fit for purpose and less influenced by the ideologies of neoliberalism
and managerial control.
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Developmental and Educational Psychology,Education