scholarly journals Organized to learn: the influence of social structure on social learning opportunities in a group

iScience ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 24 (2) ◽  
pp. 102117
Author(s):  
Bas van Boekholt ◽  
Erica van de Waal ◽  
Elisabeth H.M. Sterck
2014 ◽  
Vol 35 (5) ◽  
pp. 1037-1071 ◽  
Author(s):  
Erik Gustafsson ◽  
Michel Saint Jalme ◽  
Marie-Claude Bomsel ◽  
Sabrina Krief

Author(s):  
JW.Nugroho Joshua ◽  
I Putu Agus Swastika ◽  
Ni Made Estiyanti

The advancement of technology and the openness of the internet access in many places in Indonesia, making the shift in styles of learning and acquiring knowledge. Significant growth on such access also has changed the way everyone connected, communicate with each other and develop a social community. Unlike previous generations, college students in today’s era found many learning resources, both from his tutor at the College as well as from fellow students, also from other learning sources outside his College. The fact of this openness requires a new approach for a lecturer in the College to adopt a way of delivering his teaching, so the learning objectives can be achieved. One such implementation is implementing e-learning using the Social Learning Network. The purpose of this study is to see to what extent the effectiveness of the e-learning implementation on motivation and learning achievements of students. The research results showed that the learning opportunities has the greatest role in the motivation of learning, followed by collaborative learning. A high learning motivation using Social Learning Network, Schoology became a highly influential variable on learning achievements of Students in STMIK Primakara Bali 


1999 ◽  
Vol 3 (4) ◽  
pp. 477-493 ◽  
Author(s):  
RONALD L. AKERS

Author(s):  
Ozgur Solakoglu ◽  
Durmus A. Yuksek

The purposes of this study are to examine how social learning processes and social structure correlate with delinquency among Turkish adolescents and to articulate to what extent Akers’s social structure and social learning (SSSL) theory explains delinquency in Turkey, which is a different cultural context from Western countries in terms of family structure, level of collectivism or individualism, religion, belief systems, and norms. This study contributes to the existing body of knowledge by providing the first study testing Akers’s theory in the Turkish context. Analyses, relying on a structural equation modeling (SEM) framework, showed that the social learning process accounted for a substantial amount of variation in explaining adolescent delinquency. We also found that social learning process somewhat mediates social structural effects on delinquency.


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