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Higher Education Service Quality Scale Development for Measuring Service Quality across Campus. Cary C. Countryman, Ph.D. Clayton Hubner, Ph.D. Cecilia Yiu Chan. BYU-Hawaii. 2400 students Mission to serve Asia and the Pacific 50% are international students
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Higher Education Service QualityScale Development for Measuring Service Quality across Campus Cary C. Countryman, Ph.D. Clayton Hubner, Ph.D. Cecilia Yiu Chan
BYU-Hawaii • 2400 students • Mission to serve Asia and the Pacific • 50% are international students • Students represent 70 different countries • At least two-thirds of our students speak two or more languages
Service Quality and Higher Education • Knowledgeable consumers • Greater competition • Bad reputation (word of mouth) • Focused improvements • Assessment Efforts
Measuring Service Quality • Participation – Consumers providing feedback • Accurate measurements • Defining quality • Identifying all of the dimensions or factors of quality
SERVQUAL • Parasuraman, A., Zeithaml, V. A., & Berry, L. L. (1988). SERVQUAL: A multiple-item scale for measuring consumer perceptions of service quality. Journal of Retailing, 64(1), 12-40 • 22 scale items (expectations/perceptions) • Likert-type scale (7 points) • Five dimensions/factors: Reliability, Assurance, Tangibles, Empathy, Responsiveness
Applications of SERVQUAL • Retailing • Lodging • Historic Houses (HISTOQUAL) • Restaurants/Food Service • Health Care • Many different types of service settings
SERVQUAL in Education • Howard & Sobol (2004): Service quality in six different areas • Mahapatra & Khan (2007): EDUQUAL • Hughey & Chawla (2003): Academic computer lab • O’Neill (2003): University orientation • Banwet (2004): Graduate and post-graduate students in engineering and management institutes • Stodnick & Rogers (2008): “Students as customers” -classroom experience
SERVQUAL & Admissions • Research has shown that the quality of support services, such as an admissions office, strongly influence student retention (Hossler & Bean, 1990) • Ruby (1998) demonstrated how SERVQUAL can be used to ascertain student satisfaction in four areas of support services at a university (academic records, admissions, career services, and financial aid).
Criticism of SERVQUAL • Expectations • Focus on providing service not outcomes • Wording • 7-point Likert type scale (neutral midpoint) • Difficulty to replicate results (five factors)
Research Methodology • Modified version of SERVQUAL • Wording changes • Non-applicable scale items dropped • Focused on perceptions, not expectations • Survey administered outside of the Admissions Office
Survey • Tangibles • P1: Admissions office has up-to-date equipment • P2: Physical facilities are visually appealing (not used) • P3: Admissions office employees are well dressed and appear neat • P4: The appearance of the physical facilities is in keeping with the type of services provided (not used) • Reliability • P5: When the Admissions office promises to do something by a certain time, it is done by that time. • P6: When students have problems, the Admissions office is sympathetic and reassuring. • P7: Admissions office is dependable • P8: Admissions office provides their services at the time they promise to do so. • P9: Admissions office keeps their records accurately.
Survey (continued) • Responsiveness (reverse scored) • P10: Admissions office does not tell students exactly when services will be performed. • P11:You do not receive prompt service from Admission office employees. • P12: Employees of Admissions office are not always willing to help customers. • P13: Employees of Admission office are too busy to respond to customer request promptly. • Assurance • P14: You can trust employees of the Admissions office. • P15: You feel safe in your transactions with Admission office employees. • P16: Employees of the Admissions office are polite. • P17: Their employees get adequate support to do their jobs well (not used)
Survey (continued) • Empathy (reverse scored) • P18: Does not give you individual attention (not used) • P19:Employees of the Admissions office do not give you personal attention. • P20:Employees of the Admissions office do not know what your needs are. • P21: The Admissions office does not have your best interests at heart. • P22: The Admissions office does not have operating hours convenient to all their customers. • Overall Measurements (satisfaction/enjoyment) • I am satisfied with the Admissions office • I enjoyed my experiences with the Admissions office
Results • Reliability • Factor Analysis • Regression
Regression • Regression with Satisfaction with the University
Regression • Regression with Satisfaction with Admissions • Regression with Enjoyment with Admissions
Discussion • Our experience supports observations in the literature that replicating the five-factor solution for SERVQUAL is problematic • Some factors fail to form at all • Other factors combine or collapse into one • Unsurprising that “tangibles” failed to form a viable factor since most students interact with the admissions office via mail, email or phone and are often unaware of the physical assets
Discussion • That “responsiveness” and “empathy” formed a single factor is quite interesting • Response items relating to both variables had negative wording and hence were reverse scored • Possible “sympathy-effect” given cultural make up of students (Hofstede) and religious background (don’t judge others…too harshly) • Response item wording may make it difficult for L2 speakers to attenuate the underlying emotions
Discussion • Both “reliability” and “assurance” formed strong, distinct factors • Reliability’s emphasis of timeliness, accuracy, and dependability are closely related to what every student would like to experience regarding admissions decisions • Given the extensive disclosure of personal and confidential information during the admissions process, it is understandable that students desire trust and safety (assurance)
Discussion • Regression results for “satisfaction level” for the University suggests that student experience with Admissions is well defined by just three factors • Adjusted R2 of nearly .73 and strong F-Statistic indicate that much of the variance is explained by the three factors used as independent variables • The large beta for “reliability” is indicative of the importance that students place on timeliness, accuracy dependability, and a sympathetic disposition in the admissions process
Discussion • Other two regressions still noteworthy despite the smaller adjusted R2 values (w/ strong F’s) • “Reliability” and “assurance” have significant influence on student satisfaction with admissions and their enjoyment of the admissions process, reinforcing the importance of timeliness, accuracy dependability, a sympathetic disposition, trust and safety in the admissions process • Values consistent with student expectations for a fair, reliable, confidential, delay-free process
Future Research • Newer version of SERVQUAL • Linguistic modifications for those speak English as a second language • Other university services and departments • Comprehensive service quality scale for higher education • Other universities