Original scientific paper
THE RELATION BETWEEN MEDIA AND ADOLESCENT RISK BEHAVIOURS
Goran Livazović
orcid.org/0000-0002-0277-5534
; Department of pedagogy, Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, University J.J. Strossmayer, Osijek
Abstract
The goal of this paper is to examine the media impact on adolescent risky behaviours. The study was conducted during the 2010/2011 acad. year on 735 adolescents using a 5 dimensional questionnaire on socioeconomic status, media exposure-content dimension, the internal and external behaviour dimension, and the risk-protective interactions dimension. The data was interpreted using descriptive and inferential statistics, including ANOVA, t-test for independent samples, correlations and regression analysis.
The socioeconomic status shows gender and school achievement as the most significant predictors of risky behaviours.
Gender predicts aggressive (r=.24, p< .001) and risky sexual behaviour (r=.15, p< .001) for boys, and cyber bullying (r=.14, p< .001), eating disorders (r=.19, p< .001), absenteeism (r=.22, p< .001), media addiction (r=.26, p< .001), body image disorder (r=.50, p< .001) and mean world syndrome (r=.47, p< .001) for girls.
School achievement predicts risky sexual behaviour (r=.17, p< .001) and absenteeism (r=.21, p< .001) for lower, and eating disorders (r=.12, p< .001), media addiction and body image disorders for higher achieving students.
Adolescent interest for negative media contents predicts aggressive (r=.32, p< .001), opiate addiction (r=.27, p< .001), risky sexual behaviour (r=.19, p< .001), absenteeism (r=.19, p< .001) and cyber bullying (r=.11, p< .05).
Interest for educational media contents negatively predicts media addiction (r= -.08, p< .05).
Interest for fun media contents predicts risky sexual behaviour (r=.08, p< .05), media addiction (r=.10, p< .01) and mean world syndrome (r=.12, p< .05).
Media use negatively predicts risky sexual behaviour and exposure to cyber bullying, but positively predicts media addiction (r=.29, p< .001), as well.
More quality family, school and peer relationships are generally negative predictors of risky behaviours, and are justifiably considered as a risk-protective dimension, while more quality and active leisure time predicts a greater prevalence of externalised antisocial behaviours, but lower media addiction and mean world syndrome.
Keywords
media; adolescents; risky behaviour; risk and protective factors
Hrčak ID:
84999
URI
Publication date:
27.7.2012.
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