Educational Use of Social Media in Higher Education: Gender and Social Networking Sites as the Predictors of Consuming, Creating, and Sharing Content

E. Torun
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The aim of the research is to determine the correlations, if any, between gender, preferred SNS type, and educational social media in regard to consuming, creating and sharing content. Methods:The derived scale is administered in Turkey with the participation of a total of 365 university students. Psychometric, validation and reliability analysis of the scale which is used in the study to collect the data were done first. Principal component analysis, exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis, descriptive, correlations and multivariate analysis of variance are applied to analyze the social media usage for educational purposes. Gender and the SNS type were set as the additional predictors of the consuming, creating and sharing content on social media. Results:The validation and linguistic adaptation of the Inside School Social Media Behavior (ISSMB) scale from English to Turkish is performed first. Results showed that the three factors of the original scale were confirmed. Secondly, the derived scale is administered with the participation of a total of 365 university students. Results indicated that gender difference was a significant factor in explaining the content creation on social media. Instagram, WhatsApp, and YouTube are the most preferred SNSs for educational use among students at the higher education level. No significant effect was reported for the type of the SNS used in consuming, creating, and sharing educational content on social media. The type of the SNS used by the students was not found to influence educational social media usage; accordingly, students consume, create and share content, regardless of the type of the SNS they use. Discussion:Higher education level students prefer watching videos more than any other social media activity for their educational purposes. The second most frequently preferred social media usage activity was reported as searching for the learning resources or information pertaining to schoolwork. Creating content was the least favorable social media usage. When the social media usage purposes focus on schoolwork and are furthermore educational, males’ social media usage outperforms the females. Thus, males were more likely to create content by using social media for inside schoolwork purposes than the females. Males were also more likely to have sharing habits than the females in sharing learning resources e.g., class notes with their classmates by using social media for their inside schoolwork purposes. Limitations:The total number of participants used in the research sample is a limitation of this study. The study data were only collected in Turkey, and so the study results are only regionally generalizable. Conclusion:Higher education students are consumers of the social media when they use it for educational purposes. Accordingly, students prefer being “passive consumer social media users who avoid active content creating”. Students prefer watching the uploaded ready-to-watch videos who avoid instead of creating and uploading their own video content. When sharing items are compared with creating content items, students responded more to the latter. Students do share their information with classmates e.g. exam schedules and lecture notes. Compared to other sharing content usages, students less frequently preferred sharing extracurricular learning resources. The gender difference found herein is a predictor of social networking site usage among young people, and social networking usage changes according to gender. Males are reported as being more “giving” within a school setting when it comes to sharing the educational content with their colleagues and friends. Social media is a reality of our modern lives, one that is growing exponentially; it is highly crucial that researchers facilitate a better understanding of the ongoing changes and developments that are emerging and transforming learning. Both outside and inside school, the social media usage behaviors of young people can be examined according to different age groups do determine any age-related differences. The subject can be improved with new findings and results from different sample groups.","PeriodicalId":113905,"journal":{"name":"Acta Educationis Generalis","volume":"73 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2020-07-31","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"13","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Acta Educationis Generalis","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2478/atd-2020-0013","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 13

Abstract

Abstract Introduction:This study investigates the influence of gender and social networking sites (SNSs) such as Instagram, YouTube, WhatsApp, Facebook, and Twitter on consuming, creating, and sharing content within the educational social media usage behaviors of higher education students. The survey method is applied to measure students’ social media usage for educational purposes. So that a more effective use of social media in education can be provided, it is important to understand how university students vary in their educational use of social media. The aim of this study is to examine how higher education students use social media for their educational purposes based on the content and activities with which the students engage. The aim of the research is to determine the correlations, if any, between gender, preferred SNS type, and educational social media in regard to consuming, creating and sharing content. Methods:The derived scale is administered in Turkey with the participation of a total of 365 university students. Psychometric, validation and reliability analysis of the scale which is used in the study to collect the data were done first. Principal component analysis, exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis, descriptive, correlations and multivariate analysis of variance are applied to analyze the social media usage for educational purposes. Gender and the SNS type were set as the additional predictors of the consuming, creating and sharing content on social media. Results:The validation and linguistic adaptation of the Inside School Social Media Behavior (ISSMB) scale from English to Turkish is performed first. Results showed that the three factors of the original scale were confirmed. Secondly, the derived scale is administered with the participation of a total of 365 university students. Results indicated that gender difference was a significant factor in explaining the content creation on social media. Instagram, WhatsApp, and YouTube are the most preferred SNSs for educational use among students at the higher education level. No significant effect was reported for the type of the SNS used in consuming, creating, and sharing educational content on social media. The type of the SNS used by the students was not found to influence educational social media usage; accordingly, students consume, create and share content, regardless of the type of the SNS they use. Discussion:Higher education level students prefer watching videos more than any other social media activity for their educational purposes. The second most frequently preferred social media usage activity was reported as searching for the learning resources or information pertaining to schoolwork. Creating content was the least favorable social media usage. When the social media usage purposes focus on schoolwork and are furthermore educational, males’ social media usage outperforms the females. Thus, males were more likely to create content by using social media for inside schoolwork purposes than the females. Males were also more likely to have sharing habits than the females in sharing learning resources e.g., class notes with their classmates by using social media for their inside schoolwork purposes. Limitations:The total number of participants used in the research sample is a limitation of this study. The study data were only collected in Turkey, and so the study results are only regionally generalizable. Conclusion:Higher education students are consumers of the social media when they use it for educational purposes. Accordingly, students prefer being “passive consumer social media users who avoid active content creating”. Students prefer watching the uploaded ready-to-watch videos who avoid instead of creating and uploading their own video content. When sharing items are compared with creating content items, students responded more to the latter. Students do share their information with classmates e.g. exam schedules and lecture notes. Compared to other sharing content usages, students less frequently preferred sharing extracurricular learning resources. The gender difference found herein is a predictor of social networking site usage among young people, and social networking usage changes according to gender. Males are reported as being more “giving” within a school setting when it comes to sharing the educational content with their colleagues and friends. Social media is a reality of our modern lives, one that is growing exponentially; it is highly crucial that researchers facilitate a better understanding of the ongoing changes and developments that are emerging and transforming learning. Both outside and inside school, the social media usage behaviors of young people can be examined according to different age groups do determine any age-related differences. The subject can be improved with new findings and results from different sample groups.
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高等教育中社交媒体的教育使用:性别和社交网站作为消费、创造和分享内容的预测因素
摘要:本研究调查了性别和社交网站(如Instagram、YouTube、WhatsApp、Facebook和Twitter)对高等教育学生在教育社交媒体使用行为中消费、创建和分享内容的影响。采用调查的方法来衡量学生的社交媒体使用的教育目的。为了更有效地在教育中使用社交媒体,了解大学生在教育中使用社交媒体的差异是很重要的。本研究的目的是根据学生参与的内容和活动来研究高等教育学生如何使用社交媒体来达到他们的教育目的。这项研究的目的是确定性别、首选SNS类型和教育性社交媒体在消费、创造和分享内容方面的相关性(如果有的话)。方法:导出的量表在土耳其实施,共有365名大学生参与。首先对研究中使用的量表进行了心理测量、验证和信度分析。应用主成分分析、探索性和验证性因子分析、描述性、相关性和多变量方差分析来分析教育目的的社交媒体使用。性别和SNS类型被设置为在社交媒体上消费、创建和分享内容的附加预测因子。结果:首先对校内社交媒体行为(ISSMB)量表进行了英语到土耳其语的验证和语言适配。结果表明,原量表的三个因素得到了证实。其次,对导出的量表进行了管理,共有365名大学生参与。结果表明,性别差异是解释社交媒体内容创作的重要因素。Instagram、WhatsApp和YouTube是高等教育学生最喜欢的教育类社交网站。在社交媒体上消费、创建和分享教育内容时使用的SNS类型没有显著影响。学生使用的SNS类型对教育性社交媒体的使用没有影响;因此,无论学生使用何种社交网络,他们都会消费、创造和分享内容。讨论:高等教育水平的学生更喜欢观看视频,而不是其他任何出于教育目的的社交媒体活动。据报道,第二大最受欢迎的社交媒体使用活动是搜索学习资源或与功课有关的信息。创建内容是最不受欢迎的社交媒体使用方式。当社交媒体的使用目的集中在学业上,并进一步以教育为目的时,男性的社交媒体使用情况优于女性。因此,男性比女性更有可能利用社交媒体为家庭作业创造内容。在分享学习资源方面,男性也比女性更有分享的习惯,例如,为了完成内部作业而使用社交媒体与同学分享课堂笔记。局限性:研究样本中使用的参与者总数是本研究的局限性。研究数据仅在土耳其收集,因此研究结果仅具有区域概括性。结论:高等教育学生在使用社交媒体进行教育的同时,也是社交媒体的消费者。因此,学生更喜欢做“被动的社交媒体消费者,避免主动创作内容”。学生更喜欢观看上传的现成视频,而不是创建和上传自己的视频内容。当将分享项目与创建内容项目进行比较时,学生对后者的反应更多。学生们确实会与同学分享他们的信息,比如考试时间表和课堂笔记。与其他分享内容的使用方式相比,学生更不愿意分享课外学习资源。这里发现的性别差异是年轻人使用社交网站的一个预测指标,而社交网站的使用会根据性别而变化。据报道,在学校环境中,当与同事和朋友分享教育内容时,男性更愿意“给予”。社交媒体是我们现代生活的一个现实,它正呈指数级增长;研究人员促进对正在出现和改变学习的持续变化和发展的更好理解是非常重要的。无论是在学校外还是在学校内,年轻人的社交媒体使用行为都可以根据不同的年龄组进行检查,并确定任何与年龄相关的差异。该主题可以通过不同样本组的新发现和结果得到改进。
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