Abstract:
The objective of the study was to evaluate the psychological services of educational 
institutions and hospitals by comparing client’s feedback on counsellors’ behaviour and 
counselling sessions. Two hundred clients (120 from universities and 80 from hospitals) were 
purposively selected from six hospitals and five educational institutions. They were asked to 
complete the Client's Evaluation of Counselor Behavior Short Form (CECB-S) and the 
Session Evaluation Questionnaire (SEQ) as measures of the service quality they had taken 
from their respective organizations. Data were analyzed using independent sample t-test and 
two-way Analysis of Variances (ANOVA).  
Results indicated that mean client evaluation (CE) score by the clients of educational 
institutions was significantly higher than the clients of hospital setting (t=10.112, p<.001) but 
the mean session evaluation (SE) scores did not vary between the two service settings (t=-
1.077, p>.05). The SE scores also did not differ significantly between the clients of public 
and private universities (t=-.049, p>.001) or between government and private hospitals 
(t=.569, p>.001). The interaction between age and gender (p >0.05) or gender and number of 
sessions (p >0.05) was not statistically significant for both CE and SE. However, CE score 
increased with number of sessions (p<.000). 
Clients taking services from universities evaluated their counsellors’ behaviours 
favourably than clients taking services from hospitals, but their rating on individual sessions 
did not vary. Further studies should explore possible reasons for these differences by addressing 
counsellors’ personal qualities, experiences, skills, and therapeutic mode.