The research leading to the preparation of this paper was conducted using a random sample within a university student population. It involved one hundred undergraduate students. Judgment sampling was utilized along with stratified sampling to reflect the proportion of male and female students enrolled in its undergraduate programs. Judgment sampling, a form of non-probability sampling, refers to the purposeful selection of a target population to satisfy the specific objectives of the research. (Zikmund, 1991). Stratified sampling was utilized to take account of the relative numbers of male to female, and graduate to undergraduate, students in a total population and then to ensure that respondents were selected in the same relative proportions. Through a questionnaire format, students were asked a series of questions to ascertain levels of knowledge about ASEAN. Specifically, students were required to state their sources of information about ASEAN, its formation, membership, and capital cities and populations. With reference to the AEC, respondents were asked about its formative history, attitudes towards membership, the possible accession of East Timor, and the creation of an ASEAN citizenship status. The questionnaire then asked for respondents’ opinions on the importance of integration, changes in visa requirements, issues of job security related to increased job mobility (skilled labor), and the possibility of a single currency, With regard to the latter, it should be noted that, even though ASEAN leaders have at times taken an EU approach to boost cooperation among member states (for example, the EU “four freedoms”), fueling the perception that they sought to follow the path taken by the European trade bloc, they have long played down ideas such as a common currency or a regional financial market for Southeast Asia. They now see the EU as a cautionary tale and a case study for the region