Marta Barandiaran‐Galdós, Miren Barrenetxea Ayesta, Antonio Cardona‐Rodríguez, Juan José Mijangos del Campo and Jon Olaskoaga‐Larrauri
This paper aims to present the opinions of teaching staff at Spanish universities regarding the relative importance of a number of quality factors, and perceived levels of…
Abstract
Purpose
This paper aims to present the opinions of teaching staff at Spanish universities regarding the relative importance of a number of quality factors, and perceived levels of development of those factors in the context of their work.
Design/methodology/approach
The paper takes an empirical approach, with the opinions of teaching staff being collected via questionnaires and by telematic means.
Findings
Lecturers surveyed are particularly pessimistic in regard to the conditions in which students enter university, and probably do not share the priorities that education policy authorities and university management bodies proclaim in their discourses and policies.
Research limitations/implications
This research may be supplemented with the use of more qualitative methods and extended to other geographical and cultural contexts.
Practical implications
The opinions of teaching staff comprise useful information for the design of education policies and quality management systems applicable to Spanish universities.
Originality/value
No studies have to date been conducted in Spain to identify the opinions of university teaching staff in regard to determinants of quality. Taken as a whole, the paper enables a diagnostic analysis to be made of university education quality conditions in Spain from the viewpoint of teaching staff.