A network analysis on digital media use, reading enjoyment, and orthography precision in a highly educated sample
Identificadores
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10481/109931Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemMateria
cultural and social implications Post-secondary education Social media 21st century abilities
Fecha
2023Resumen
At least a decade before the advent of smartphones, alarms rose about a diffuse worsening of
literacy because mobile phone use appeared frequently accompanied by deviations from standard
linguistic norms. Evidence, however, has been mixed and, in addition, several key studies were
performed before the current ubiquitous use of online entertainment. The present study used a
network approach (partial correlation networks) to examine the relations between the partici
pants’ use of free time (whether they devoted it to diverse online and/or offline activities), their
enjoyment of reading, and their scores in an orthography test, used as proxy for written language
skills. The final sample comprised 840 adults, out of which about 86.7% either were studying or
had a university degree. Participants’ age and their use of social media contributed the most to
the network structure. Social media use was linked to both more social as well as more solitary
free time activity, but it showed no direct connection with orthographic skills: at least in this
highly educated sample, the relation between written language skills and digital media use was
moderated by other factors. Orthographic skills improved, through separate routes, with years of
education and with number of books read in a year. As the latter was also strongly associated with
subjective reading enjoyment and devoting free time to reading, the findings therefore also
indicate that greater reading pleasure significantly contributes to better written language skills.





