Face-to-face Contacts, Facebook Connections and Academic Support: Adolescents' Networks between and across Gender and Culture in Finland

被引:2
作者
Li, Shupin [1 ]
Palonen, Tuire [1 ]
Lehtinen, Erno [1 ]
Hakkarainen, Kai [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Turku, Dept Teacher Educ, Turku, Finland
[2] Univ Helsinki, Dept Educ Sci, Helsinki, Finland
关键词
Similarity; cultural background; face-to-face network; Facebook network; peer academic support; social network analysis; FRIENDSHIPS; ONLINE; STUDENTS; YOUNG; ACHIEVEMENT; ATTITUDES;
D O I
10.1177/1103308818766773
中图分类号
C [社会科学总论];
学科分类号
03 ; 0303 ;
摘要
The purpose of the present study is to investigate gender and cultural background similarities among adolescents' patterns of networking within a multicultural Finnish school. The participants consisted of 109 seventh to ninth graders who represented three cultural groups: major-culture (n = 50; 46%), bi-culture (n = 26; 24%) and minor-culture (n = 33; 30%). A social networking questionnaire was administered to trace face-to-face, Facebook and academic support networks within each classroom. Results of social network analysis revealed that bi-culture students were culturally the most open to network with their classmates in face-to-face contacts, Facebook connections and peer academic support. Female students were more inclined to use Facebook to connect with other female classmates, whereas males were equally likely to connect with either gender via Facebook. No gender similarities were found in academic support network although female students were more apt to engage in academic support than their male counterparts.
引用
收藏
页码:184 / 200
页数:17
相关论文
共 47 条
[31]  
Mäkitalo-Siegl K, 2013, ADVANCES IN HELP-SEEKING RESEARCH AND APPLICATIONS: THE ROLE OF EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES, P99
[32]   Adolescents' and emerging adults' social networking online: Homophily or diversity? [J].
Mazur, Elizabeth ;
Richards, Lacey .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2011, 32 (04) :180-188
[33]   Birds of a feather: Homophily in social networks [J].
McPherson, M ;
Smith-Lovin, L ;
Cook, JM .
ANNUAL REVIEW OF SOCIOLOGY, 2001, 27 :415-444
[34]   Similarity and the quality of online and offline social relationships among adolescents in Israel [J].
Mesch, Gustavo S. ;
Talmud, Ilan .
JOURNAL OF RESEARCH ON ADOLESCENCE, 2007, 17 (02) :455-465
[35]   Racial homophily and its persistence in newcomers' social networks [J].
Mollica, KA ;
Gray, B ;
Treviño, LK .
ORGANIZATION SCIENCE, 2003, 14 (02) :123-136
[36]   Friendships and outgroup attitudes among ethnic minority youth: The mediating role of ethnic and host society identification [J].
Munniksma, Anke ;
Verkuyten, Maykel ;
Flache, Andreas ;
Stark, Tobias H. ;
Veenstra, Rene .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF INTERCULTURAL RELATIONS, 2015, 44 :88-99
[37]   The 'Non-aligned': Young People's Narratives of Rejection of Social Networking Sites [J].
Neves, Barbara Barbosa ;
de Matos, Joao Monteiro ;
Rente, Rita ;
Martins, Sara Lopes .
YOUNG, 2015, 23 (02) :116-135
[38]   Networks of meaning and the bicultural mind: A structural equation modeling approach [J].
Pouliasi, Katerina ;
Verkuyten, Maykel .
JOURNAL OF EXPERIMENTAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2007, 43 (06) :955-963
[39]   Friending, IMing, and Hanging Out Face-to-Face: Overlap in Adolescents' Online and Offline Social Networks [J].
Reich, Stephanie M. ;
Subrahmanyam, Kaveri ;
Espinoza, Guadalupe .
DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2012, 48 (02) :356-368
[40]   Group identity and peer relations: A longitudinal study of group identity, perceived peer acceptance, and friendships amongst ethnic minority English children [J].
Rutland, Adam ;
Cameron, Lindsey ;
Jugert, Philipp ;
Nigbur, Dennis ;
Brown, Rupert ;
Watters, Charles ;
Hossain, Rosa ;
Landau, Anick ;
Le Touze, Dominique .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2012, 30 (02) :283-302