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Learning With People Like Me: The Role of Age-Similar Peers on Online Business Course Engagement

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Rosendahl Huber,  Laura
MPI for Innovation and Competition, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Rosendahl Huber, L., Lane, J. N., & Lakhani, K. R. (2020). Learning With People Like Me: The Role of Age-Similar Peers on Online Business Course Engagement. Harvard Business School Working Paper, 21-072.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0007-DEC5-1
Abstract
Over the past decade, online learning has witnessed tremendous growth in popularity due to its ability to reach diverse participants in a scalable manner. However, one primary area of concern is the low course completion rates in digital platform-based learning, compared to face-to-face counterparts. Given that most education tends to be organized by age, we ask: how does the degree of age-similarity among cohort peers affect course engagement and persistence? Using a unique dataset of 17,000 working professionals enrolled in business skills training courses offered by an elite U.S. business school over a three year period, we show that age similarity has a positive effect on individual course completion: an individual’s likelihood of course completion increases by 3% for every 10 same-age cohort peers. Given that the average cohort size is 220 people, this suggests that a small threshold of same-age peers can have a substantial impact on course engagement and persistence. To examine mechanisms, we turn to participants’ motivations for taking the course, and find that similar-age peers are more likely to affiliate with one another because they share a common motivation for taking the course. Our results suggest that there is an implicit trade-off between social engagement and diversity of perspectives in online courses, and that the organization and structure of online courses ought to balance both objectives.