Abstract

Abstract Peer learning is gaining momentum as an educational model suitable for university students. This study investigates the characteristics of the participation in peer-assisted learning groups (PALG) for students in Harbin-China, and compares them to their medical counterparts. The mode of peer-assisted learning interactions considered cuts across face-to-face and the use of four mediums of communication. The comparison was also extended to factors such as quality, conflict, cohesion, peer-influence, and leadership that is known to affect the learning interactions within such groups. Sixty percent (60%) of the peer-assisted learning interactions among the students take place via social media. The frequency of these learning interactions among peers is found to have a positive correlation with all the factors except for conflict (−0.040 p

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