Hospitality Graduate Students’ Program Choice Decisions: Implications for Faculty and Administrators


Autoria(s): Van Hoof, Hubert B.; Wu, Luorong; Zhang, Lu
Data(s)

03/03/2014

Resumo

Despite rapid growth in the quality and volume of hospitality graduate research and education in recent years, little information is available in the extant body of literature about the program choices of hospitality management graduate students, information that is crucial for program administrators and faculty in their attempts to attract the most promising students to their programs. This paper reports on a study among graduate students in U.S, hospitality management programs designed to understand why they chose to pursue their degrees at their programs of choice. Given the large numbers of international students presently enrolled, the study additionally looked into why international hospitality management students chose to leave their home countries and why they decided to pursue a graduate degree in the U.S. Based on the findings, implications for hospitality administrators and faculty in the U.S. and abroad are discussed and directions for future research are presented.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/hospitalityreview/vol31/iss3/3

http://digitalcommons.fiu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1571&context=hospitalityreview

Publicador

FIU Digital Commons

Fonte

Hospitality Review

Palavras-Chave #hospitality management #graduate education #graduate hospitality student #international hospitality graduate student; graduate program choice #Business Administration, Management, and Operations #Food and Beverage Management #Food Science #Gaming and Casino Operations Management #Hospitality Administration and Management #Recreation, Parks and Tourism Administration #Social and Behavioral Sciences #Tourism #Tourism and Travel
Tipo

text