May 28,2018 Scientific research & Postgraduate Studies, Business Administration

Master Degree under Crisis: The Salient Motives of Business Students to Enroll in a Postgraduate Program

Researchers

Bayan Khalifa, Osama Dukhan, Sulaiman Mouselli,

Published in

International Journal of Educational Management, Vol. 32 (May 2018) Issue 4, pp. 538-549

Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to explore why students decide to enrol in a business postgraduate programme at Damascus University in the current Syrian crisis.

Design/methodology/approach: Exploration of students’ motives was generated in this study using semi-structured interviews. On the basis of saturation sampling, 11 interviews took place in the leading Syrian university providing postgraduate programmes, Damascus University.

Findings: The results from the interviews indicate the existence of six different motives for students to enroll in a postgraduate study: self-motives, professional motives, social motives, academic motives, lack of vision, and delaying military service, which is directly caused by the current war conditions in Syria.

Practical implications: Understanding postgraduates’ motives is essential at the national level, the institutional level, and also at the individual level to make better future plans related to opening new programs or altering admission criteria. Recommendations to higher education policy makers are highlighted in the study.

Originality/value: The majority of previous studies concentrate on students’ motives to pursue postgraduate studies during financial crisis. However, very little is known on why students decide to enroll in a business postgraduate program in a war context.

Keywords: Crisis, Syria, Postgraduate program, Business administration, Master degree, Student motives.

Link to read full paper

https://doi.org/10.1108/IJEM-02-2017-0038