Student networks on online teaching due to COVID-19: Academic effects of strong friendship ties and perceived academic prestige in physics and mathematics courses
Javier Pulgar, Diego Ram\'irez, Abigail Umanzor, Cristian Candia,, Iv\'an S\'anchez

TL;DR
This study investigates how different types of student relationships, such as friendship and academic prestige, influence collaboration effectiveness and academic performance in physics and mathematics courses during COVID-19 remote teaching, using social network analysis.
Contribution
It provides new insights into how strong friendship ties and academic prestige affect collaboration outcomes and academic success in online secondary education settings.
Findings
Strong friendship ties positively influence collaboration effects on grades.
Collaboration benefits vary between physics and mathematics courses.
Social network structures differ between rural and urban student groups.
Abstract
Collaboration among students is fundamental for knowledge building and competency development. Nonetheless, the effectiveness of student collaboration depends on the extent that these interactions take place under conditions that favor commitment, trust, and decision-making among those who interact. The sanitary situation and the transition to remote teaching has added new challenges for collaboration given that students' interactions are mediated by Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs). In this study we explore the effectiveness of different collaborative relationships on physics and mathematics, from a sample of secondary students from two schools located in rural and urban areas in southern Chile. We used Social Network Analysis (SNA) to map students' friendships relations, academic prestige, and collaboration on both courses. Later we combined the collaboration network…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEducational Innovations and Technology · Online Learning and Analytics · Online and Blended Learning
