Modeling the post-secondary education in Singapore.

Economics is often described as the science of choice. Our paper is interested in studying the choices available to consumers and producers in the postsecondary education market. We establish this by constructing a demand-supply model for the local context. This paper is structured as follows. Fi...

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Main Authors: Chew, Carene Fong Fong., Lee, Pei Shan., Neo, Yuan Zhen.
Other Authors: David Alexander Reisman
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14973
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-149732019-12-10T14:32:29Z Modeling the post-secondary education in Singapore. Chew, Carene Fong Fong. Lee, Pei Shan. Neo, Yuan Zhen. David Alexander Reisman School of Humanities and Social Sciences DRNTU::Social sciences::General::Education Economics is often described as the science of choice. Our paper is interested in studying the choices available to consumers and producers in the postsecondary education market. We establish this by constructing a demand-supply model for the local context. This paper is structured as follows. First, we introduce the education market as a unique case of monopolistic competition. Then, we define ten differentiating factors that will affect a student’s choice of schools. These factors are split into academic, social and personal factors. Our main hypothesis is that students will prioritize academic factors, followed by social and personal factors respectively. Concepts from business economics, behavioral economics and economic sociology will be introduced to support our theoretical framework. After collecting 267 surveys, we ranked student preferences and measured their satisfaction level for each factor. We ran significance tests on SPSS to verify our data. Our results have proven our hypothesis correct with a few exceptions. As expected, academic factors were ranked as the top five determinants of school choice. Yet surprisingly, ‘location’ was the most important factor in choosing a school. We attribute this to the high opportunity cost of time found in our performative culture. We also found that social factors played a bigger role than expected in choosing a school. Ultimately, we hope to offer a real world representation of choices available to consumers and producers in the local educational context. Bachelor of Arts 2009-03-17T08:35:48Z 2009-03-17T08:35:48Z 2009 2009 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14973 en 75 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::General::Education
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::General::Education
Chew, Carene Fong Fong.
Lee, Pei Shan.
Neo, Yuan Zhen.
Modeling the post-secondary education in Singapore.
description Economics is often described as the science of choice. Our paper is interested in studying the choices available to consumers and producers in the postsecondary education market. We establish this by constructing a demand-supply model for the local context. This paper is structured as follows. First, we introduce the education market as a unique case of monopolistic competition. Then, we define ten differentiating factors that will affect a student’s choice of schools. These factors are split into academic, social and personal factors. Our main hypothesis is that students will prioritize academic factors, followed by social and personal factors respectively. Concepts from business economics, behavioral economics and economic sociology will be introduced to support our theoretical framework. After collecting 267 surveys, we ranked student preferences and measured their satisfaction level for each factor. We ran significance tests on SPSS to verify our data. Our results have proven our hypothesis correct with a few exceptions. As expected, academic factors were ranked as the top five determinants of school choice. Yet surprisingly, ‘location’ was the most important factor in choosing a school. We attribute this to the high opportunity cost of time found in our performative culture. We also found that social factors played a bigger role than expected in choosing a school. Ultimately, we hope to offer a real world representation of choices available to consumers and producers in the local educational context.
author2 David Alexander Reisman
author_facet David Alexander Reisman
Chew, Carene Fong Fong.
Lee, Pei Shan.
Neo, Yuan Zhen.
format Final Year Project
author Chew, Carene Fong Fong.
Lee, Pei Shan.
Neo, Yuan Zhen.
author_sort Chew, Carene Fong Fong.
title Modeling the post-secondary education in Singapore.
title_short Modeling the post-secondary education in Singapore.
title_full Modeling the post-secondary education in Singapore.
title_fullStr Modeling the post-secondary education in Singapore.
title_full_unstemmed Modeling the post-secondary education in Singapore.
title_sort modeling the post-secondary education in singapore.
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/14973
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