Digital Engagement and Academic Functioning: A Developmental-Contextual Approach

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

Since the turn of the millennium, the digital revolution has opened a new layer of opportunities for adolescents to participate, create and learn. Simultaneously there has been growth in both debate and worries regarding how the intensive engagement with digital media affects students' academic performance, engagement, and school-related well-being, that is, academic functioning. Students' continuously evolving digital practices are not always in congruence with the more traditional ways of schoolwork. Students flourish and fulfill their potential when the informal and format practices of learning reach congruence, but when this is not the case, frictions can emerge. Spending time with digital media can provide new avenues for learning and development, but it can equally well divert young people from their studies or increase the daily demands. In this narrative review, we address these continuities and discontinuities between engagement with digital media and academic functioning for school-aged children and young people, focusing on meta-analyses, reviews, and key studies. Following the examination of the current literature, we conclude that, in general, the field of "digital media effects" needs to move beyond screen time and utilize the research on the students' multidimensional socio-digital engagement already conducted. Second, we conclude that the average effects of digital engagement on academic functioning are negligibly small but heterogeneous, further corroborating the claim to examine the qualitative differences in students' digital engagement, the individual differences between students, as well as the contextual interplay.

Original languageEnglish
JournalEuropean Psychologist
Volume27
Issue number2
Pages (from-to)102-115
Number of pages14
ISSN1016-9040
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5 Apr 2022
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Fields of Science

  • 516 Educational sciences
  • 515 Psychology
  • digital media
  • academic performance
  • engagement
  • well-being
  • VIDEO GAME ADDICTION
  • SOCIAL-MEDIA USE
  • NETWORK SITE USE
  • MENTAL-HEALTH
  • SCHOOL BURNOUT
  • ANGRY BIRDS
  • ADOLESCENTS AGGRESSION
  • DEPRESSIVE SYMPTOMS
  • PROSOCIAL BEHAVIOR
  • NATIVES DEBATE

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