Brian - Related Literature and Studies
Brian - Related Literature and Studies
Brian - Related Literature and Studies
CHAPTER II
REVIEW OF RELATED LITERATURE AND STUDIES
This chapter provides a thorough assessment of the research and
associated material that is important and pertinent to the current investigation. It
offers the theoretical nature of the subject under consideration on the effect of
social media on the academic performance of HUMSS students of West Palale
National High School.
Demographic profile of SHS Filipino students in terms of using social media
Review of Related Literature
Khan (2009) claims that Facebook users frequently have poor academic
achievement. Similar to this, Englander et al. (2010) claim that social media has
a negative impact on students' academic performance and may be much more
significant than its benefits. By using synchronous communication programs like
websites and forums, Kubey et al. (2010) found a correlation between poor
educational achievement and internet dependence. According to Jocabsen and
Forste (2011), first-year university students in the US who self-report their GPA
have a negative association with the use of various media, including mobile
phones. Yen at el in Taiwan. According to a 2009 study, there is a link between
respondents' use of mobile devices and their ability to focus on their academic
work. Similar to this, Hong et al. (2012) found a correlation between daily mobile
phone use and a self-reported indicator of educational difficulties among a
sample of university students from Taiwan. Sanchez-Martinz and Otero (2009)
discovered a link between "intensive" cellphone use and instructor failure in a
study of Spanish high school pupils. Nevertheless, additional research such
studies by Ahmed and Qazi (2011), Hanqittai and Hsich (2010), and Pasek and
Hanqittai (2009) on a related issue found no link between social media use and
academic achievement. a research project at that there is no connection between
how much time is spent on social networking sites and grades, according to
research by the Whittemore School of Business and Economics on 1,000 127
students (Martin, 2009). Once more, a 2010 study from the University of
Hampshire found no connection between student use of social media and
academic performance. Ninety percent of teenagers in the US have access to
the Internet, and 75 percent of those teenagers use it frequently, according to a
recent survey (Kist, 2008). Additionally, according to this study's findings, around
half of all teenagers with Internet access are also members of social networking
sites and utilize the Internet to make plans and interact with peers (Kist, 2008).
Social networking sites were used by 16% of all adult internet users (18–29 years
old) in September 2005, but by May 2010 this number had risen to 86%.
Related Studies
According to Haand and Shuwang (2020), social media addiction can also
lead to poor eating habits, sleep problems, brain drain, depression, and poor
academic performance. Additionally, students felt that they could not control how
much time they spent on social media sites and how much time they spent on
sites for schoolwork.
Link
https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/EJ1083595.pdf
https://dergipark.org.tr/en/download/article-file/2202907
https://tojdel.net/journals/tojdel/articles/v08i02/v08i02-03.pdf
https://downloads.hindawi.com/journals/edri/2020/8877712.pdf
https://dergipark.org.tr/en/download/article-file/2202907
References