Alina Morawska, Japheth Adina, Asaduzzaman Khan, Karen M T Turner
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Introduction: Contemporary parenting involves technology-related challenges such as establishing guidelines for how 10-19-year-old adolescents use social media. Previous research has shown inconsistent findings on strategies that parents adopt in helping their adolescents navigate the use of social media. It is unclear how parenting practices contribute to shaping adolescents' digital literacy. Thus, the current review aimed to explore the relationship between parental factors and adolescent social media use.
Methods: We conducted systematic literature searches in four online databases: Scopus, PubMed, PsycINFO, and ERIC. Based on predefined eligibility, the search yielded 27 studies (19 cross-sectional) mainly conducted in Europe, the United States, and Asia Pacific involving 26,337 adolescents.
Results: Four aspects of parenting practices (parent modelling, mediation/communication, monitoring, and limit-setting) were identified that were linked with adolescent engagement with social media. Adolescents mirror their parents' social media habits, including time spent online and specific behaviours like privacy settings. Specifically, parental mediation positively correlated with adolescent social media engagement while parental monitoring showed mixed results on adolescent social media use. Additionally, proactive limit-setting strategies appeared to mitigate problematic social media use, while reactive approaches were associated with increased social media use.
Conclusion: This review demonstrates the multifaceted role of parental practices, particularly modelling and mediation/communication, in shaping adolescent social media use behaviours. It also highlights the need for further research to delineate the nuanced effects of monitoring and limit-setting, emphasising the importance of considering individual adolescent needs and family dynamics in the development of effective intervention strategies.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of Adolescence is an international, broad based, cross-disciplinary journal that addresses issues of professional and academic importance concerning development between puberty and the attainment of adult status within society. It provides a forum for all who are concerned with the nature of adolescence, whether involved in teaching, research, guidance, counseling, treatment, or other services. The aim of the journal is to encourage research and foster good practice through publishing both empirical and clinical studies as well as integrative reviews and theoretical advances.