Assessing academic entitlement in pharmacy students: insights from Saudi Arabia
Dalia Almaghaslah, Bayan Alamri

TL;DR
This study examines academic entitlement among Saudi pharmacy students and finds it is significantly linked to age, but not gender or GPA.
Contribution
The study provides insights into academic entitlement in Saudi pharmacy students and identifies age as a significant demographic factor.
Findings
Younger pharmacy students show higher levels of academic entitlement.
Age is significantly associated with academic entitlement (P = 0.032).
Gender and GPA do not significantly correlate with academic entitlement.
Abstract
Academic entitlement, characterized by students’ expectations of academic rewards without proportional effort, has become an emerging concern in higher education, particularly in pharmacy programs. Understanding the demographic factors contributing to this phenomenon can help institutions design targeted interventions to mitigate its effects. The aim of this study was to assess Academic Entitlement (AE) its seven subscales, including Rewards for Effort, Accommodation, Responsibility Avoidance, Customer Orientation, Customer Service Expectation, and Grade Haggling among pharmacy students in Saudi Arabia. Also to assess association between AE and demographics including age, gender and GPA. A 17-item Academic Entitlement Questionnaire was distributed to pharmacy students through an online survey. The questionnaire, translated into Arabic using the back-translation method, was piloted for…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInnovations in Medical Education · Medical Education and Admissions · Evaluation of Teaching Practices
