6533b834fe1ef96bd129e32b

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Lessons learned on student engagement from the nature of pervasive socio‐digital interests and related network participation of adolescents

Shupin LiKai HakkarainenMilla KruskopfKirsti LonkaKirsti Lonka

subject

interestoppiminenmedia_common.quotation_subjectONLINECHILDREN050109 social psychologyStudent engagementGAMESEducationsocio&#8208sosiaaliset verkostotnuoretNATIVES0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesegocentric networksdigitalisaatiomedia_commonosallistuminenHYPOTHESISdigital participationbusiness.industrypervasive technology4. EducationMEMORYSOCIOMETRIC STATUS05 social sciencesEducational technologyconnected learning050301 educationMOTIVATIONteknologinen kehitysPERFORMANCEPublic relationsdigital engagementWORKINGComputer Science ApplicationsFriendshipPervasive technologyConnected learningubiikkiyhteiskuntaSociometric statussocio‐digital participation516 Educational sciencesComputer-mediated communicationbusinessPsychology0503 education

description

The rise of modern socio-digital technologies has fundamentally changed the everyday environments in which young people communicate with each other and cultivate interests. To gain a more sophisticated understanding of this phenomenon, this study provides in-depth, qualitative insights into adolescents’ experiences of their socio-digital developmental ecologies. The 15 interview participants were recruited based on a previously conducted questionnaire. The semi-structured theme interview addressed the socio-digital aspects of the participants’ interest-driven behaviours and related networks with the aid of participant-generated egocentric maps. The data not only qualitatively enrich the picture on adolescents’ friendship- and interest-driven socio-digital participation but also provide new perspectives on the phenomena through the added network-layer of analysis. The youth seem to vary in their motivational profiles related to their participation and the potential relevant psychological background factors for this variation are considered. Educational implications of these results are discussed when it comes to effective student engagement and connected learning. Peer reviewed

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-202011186667