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Evidence Base

Early adolescents’ use of information and communication technologies (ICTs) for social communication in 20 countries: Examining the roles of ICT-related behavioral and motivational characteristics

Publication details

Year: 2017
DOI: 10.1016/j.chb.2017.03.058
Issued: 2017
Language: English
Volume: 73
Start Page: 260
End Page: 270
Editors:
Authors: Areepattamannil S.; Khine M.S.
Type: Journal article
Journal: Computers in Human Behavior
Topics: Internet usage, practices and engagement; Wellbeing; Access, inequalities and vulnerabilities; Other
Sample: 56209 students (Mean age = 14.35 years) from 3132 schools in 20 countries ( Argentina (Buenos Aires), Australia, Canada (Ontario and Newfoundland and Labrador), Chile, China (Hong Kong, SAR), Croatia, Czech Republic, Denmark, Germany, Lithuania, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Republic of Korea, Russian Federation, Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Switzerland, Thailand, and Turkey.)
Implications For Educators About: Digital citizenship; School innovation
Implications For Policy Makers About: Stepping up awareness and empowerment
Implications For Stakeholders About: Researchers

Abstract

Social interaction is integral to the healthy psychosocial development of adolescents. The rapid expansion and evolution of the Information and Communication Technology (ICT) sector over the last two decades has opened up a new world of unlimited opportunities and possibilities for social interaction. Despite the tremendous strides that have been made in the ICT sector, there has been a dearth of research on the factors linked to adolescents’ use of ICT for social interaction. The present study, therefore, drawing on data from the 2013 International Computer and Information Literacy Study (ICILS) database and employing three-level hierarchical linear modeling (HLM) as an analytic strategy, examined the predictive effects of ICT-related behavioral and motivational characteristics on the frequency of use of ICT for social communication among 56209 early adolescents from 3132 schools in 20 ICLIS participating countries. The results of the three-level HLM analyses, after accounting for student-, school-, and country-level demographic characteristics, revealed that early adolescents’ ICT-related behavioral and motivational characteristics significantly and positively predicted their use of ICT for social communication. Specifically, Internet access at home, number of computers at home, learning of ICT tasks at school, use of specific ICT applications, use of ICT during lessons at school, use of ICT for recreation, ICT self-efficacy, and interest as well as enjoyment in using ICT significantly and positively predicted the use of ICT for social communication among early adolescents in 20 countries. Implications of the findings are discussed briefly for policy and practice.

Outcome

"...[T]he present study found empirical evidence for the positive relations of ICT-related behavioral and motivational characteristics with the frequency of use of ICT for social communication among early adolescents in 20 ICILS participating countries, potentially pathological or addictive use of ICT may adversely affect their physical, cognitive, and psychosocial development..." (Areepattamannil & Khine, 2017, p. 270)
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