Brainly collaborated with University of Airlangga

(Comments)

I want to repost some nice article that once appeared in Kompasiana about collaboration between Brainly and University of Airlangga, Indonesia. This research collaboration was one of the big milestone that has been achieved by Brainly. The efforts to gain the trust to parents and academic society in Indonesia have been started since two years ago. 

What is startup term

Lately, the business world in Indonesia is booming with the term Startup. Actually what is a startup, Startup according to Wikipedia is

... a startup, generally called Startup (or other spelling, Startup), refers to all companies that have not been operating recently. These companies are mostly newly established companies and are in the development and research phase to find the right market.

The term "startup" became popular internationally during the dot-com bubble, wherein that period, many dot-com companies were established simultaneously.

From this definition, the startup world usually looks very exclusive with the world of information technology and angel investors. If the Startup is already developing, the Startup will often try to validate whether the activities they are doing are genuinely beneficial to the user.

Dimas the head of Brainly Indonesia

Brainly, an educational startup with the most extensive user base in the world today with 80 million users worldwide and 14 million in Indonesia every month trying to validate whether the learning model offered by Brainly in the form of shared learning interactions through online media is beneficial to the development of student achievement or not.

Therefore, Brainly and the Psychology Faculty of Airlangga University will conduct joint research in several public and private schools in Surabaya. The activity that will involve hundreds of students will measure whether students' self-confidence increases and whether academic performance also increases when students actively ask and answer at Brainly.

As reported by the website of the Faculty of Psychology, Airlangga University. The researcher involved cyberpsychology experts from Airlangga University Dr. Rahkman Ardi.

The signing of the MoU was between the person in charge of Brainly Indonesia, Dimas Mukhlas Widiantoro Ph.D. Cand with the Dean of the Faculty of Psychology Dr. Nurul Hartini. Responsible for Brainly and Dean of FPsi Unair. 

Previously Brainly also carried out research with different themes such as machine learning at Michigan State University and Rutgers University in New Jersey United States.

Sign the agreement

The process of signing the MoU

The following is a photo of the collaboration, as seen from the gallery of Dr. Dewi Retno Suminar, as Deputy Dean of Research, Publication, and Cooperation; Dr. Nurul Hartini as Dean of the Faculty of Psychology, Dimas Mukhlas Ph.D. and as the person in charge of Brainly Indonesia, and Dr. Rahkman Ardi as a cyberpsychology expert from Airlangga University.

Group picture

Group photo session

Currently unrated

Comments

Riddles

22nd Jul- 2020, by: Editor in Chief
524 Shares 4 Comments
Generic placeholder image
20 Oct- 2019, by: Editor in Chief
524 Shares 4 Comments
Generic placeholder image
20Aug- 2019, by: Editor in Chief
524 Shares 4 Comments
10Aug- 2019, by: Editor in Chief
424 Shares 4 Comments
Generic placeholder image
10Aug- 2015, by: Editor in Chief
424 Shares 4 Comments

More News  »

Fixing the issue in assumption of OLS step by step or one by one

Recent news

Hi, I want to raise the issue related to know whether your OLS is ok or not. 

read more
5 days, 16 hours ago

Meaning of 45 degree in economics chart

Recent news

The **45-degree line** in economics and geometry refers to a line where the values on the x-axis and y-axis are equal at every point. It typically has a slope of 1, meaning that for every unit increase along the horizontal axis (x), there is an equal unit increase along the vertical axis (y). Here are a couple of contexts where the 45-degree line is significant:

read more
1 month, 1 week ago

hyperinflation in hungary

Recent news

The **hyperinflation in Hungary** in the aftermath of World War II (1945–1946) is considered the worst case of hyperinflation in recorded history. The reasons behind this extreme economic event are numerous, involving a combination of war-related devastation, political instability, massive fiscal imbalances, and mismanagement of monetary policy. Here's an in-depth look at the primary causes:

read more
1 month, 2 weeks ago

what is neutrailty of money

Recent news

**Neutrality of money** is a concept in economics that suggests changes in the **money supply** only affect **nominal variables** (like prices, wages, and exchange rates) and have **no effect on real variables** (like real GDP, employment, or real consumption) in the **long run**.

read more
1 month, 2 weeks ago

Japan deflationary phenomenon

Recent news

Deflation in Japan, which has persisted over several decades since the early 1990s, is a complex economic phenomenon. It has been influenced by a combination of structural, demographic, monetary, and fiscal factors. Here are the key reasons why deflation occurred and persisted in Japan:

read more
1 month, 2 weeks ago

What the tips against inflation

Recent news

Hedging against inflation involves taking financial or investment actions designed to protect the purchasing power of money in the face of rising prices. Inflation erodes the value of currency over time, so investors seek assets or strategies that tend to increase in value or generate returns that outpace inflation. Below are several ways to hedge against inflation:

read more
1 month, 2 weeks ago

Long and short run philip curve

Recent news

The **Phillips Curve** illustrates the relationship between inflation and unemployment, and how this relationship differs in the **short run** and the **long run**. Over time, economists have modified the original Phillips Curve framework to reflect more nuanced understandings of inflation and unemployment dynamics.

read more
1 month, 2 weeks ago

How the government deal with inflation (monetary and fiscal) policies

Recent news

Dealing with inflation requires a combination of **fiscal and monetary policy** tools. Policymakers adjust these tools depending on the nature of inflation—whether it's **demand-pull** (inflation caused by excessive demand in the economy) or **cost-push** (inflation caused by rising production costs). Below are key approaches to controlling inflation through fiscal and monetary policy.

read more
1 month, 2 weeks ago

More News »

Generic placeholder image

Collaboratively administrate empowered markets via plug-and-play networks. Dynamically procrastinate B2C users after installed base benefits. Dramatically visualize customer directed convergence without