在线教育中的社会资本发展及其对学习成绩和满意度的影响

T. Wong, Kevin Tee Liang Tan, Sheila Rose Darmaraj, Joshua Teck Khun Loo, Alex Hou Hong Ng
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摘要

目的 第一个目的是调查和确定在线教育中学生的社会资本发展情况。第二个目的是分析社会资本对学生学业成功和教育满意度的影响。设计/方法/途径采用定量研究方法,264 名受访者包括马来西亚高校的学生。数据收集工具是一份在线问卷,在参与者知情同意的情况下进行调查。研究结果表明,在线教育中社会资本的教师资本和同伴资本部分没有受到影响,但家庭资本部分有所下降。因此,得出的结论是,在线教育中的整体社会资本普遍下降。研究局限性/意义本研究侧重于 COVID-19 大流行期间的学习阶段,在此期间,在线学习和交流被严格执行,这为探索学生如何调整其社会资本发展提供了一个独特的机会。社会影响研究结果和后续建议对教育实践和政策的社会可持续性具有相当大的社会影响。原创性/价值2020 年 3 月开始的 COVID-19 大流行以及随后许多国家的长期实体封锁迫使习惯于课堂教育的高校暂时转向在线教育。这种情况创造了一个新颖的 "自然实验",即在大流行期间,同一所高校通常在教室(面对面)进行的课程或项目在网上进行,从而促进了研究结果的原创性。
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Social capital development in online education and its impact on academic performance and satisfaction
PurposeThe first objective is to investigate and determine the social capital development of students in online education. The second objective is to analyze the influence of social capital on students’ academic success and educational satisfaction. The third objective is to generate recommendations to foster social capital development.Design/methodology/approachA quantitative research approach is employed, with 264 respondents comprising students from colleges and universities in Malaysia. The data gathering instrument is an online questionnaire administered with the informed consent of participants. Data analysis is performed using structural equation modeling (SEM).FindingsThe results show that the faculty capital and peer capital components of social capital have not been compromised in online education, but the family capital component has declined. As such, it is concluded that there is a general decline in overall social capital in online education. These findings form the basis for recommendations on promoting social capital development among students in colleges and universities internationally.Research limitations/implicationsThis study focused on study periods during the COVID-19 pandemic where online learning and communication were strictly enforced, providing a unique opportunity to explore how students adapted their social capital development. However, this is not meant to be a representation of scenarios where students are given the option of either physical or online education or a combination of both.Practical implicationsAcademic and institutional management implications are evident, and recommendations are made based on the findings.Social implicationsThe findings and subsequent recommendations have considerable social implications in terms of social sustainability of education practices and policies.Originality/valueThe COVID-19 pandemic that started in March 2020 and subsequent prolonged periods of physical lockdowns in many countries have forced colleges and universities that customarily practice classroom education to shift to online education temporarily. This situation created a novel “natural experiment” when classes or programs from the same college or university that are customarily conducted in classrooms (in person) were conducted online during the pandemic, thus contributing to the originality of the findings.
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