PurposeSocial networking sites (SNS) are heavily used by university students for personal and academic purposes. Despite their benefits, using SNS can generate stress for many people. SNS stressors have been associated with numerous maladaptive outcomes. The objective in this study is to investigate when and how SNS use damages student achievement and psychological wellbeing.Design/methodology/approachCombining the theoretical perspectives from technostress and the strength model of self-control, this study theoretically develops and empirically tests the pathways which explain how and when SNS stressors harm student achievement and psychological wellbeing. The authors test the research model through a two-wave survey of 220 SNS using university students.FindingsThe study extends existing research by showing that it is through the process of diminishing self-control over SNS use that SNS stressors inhibit achievement and wellbeing outcomes. The study also finds that the high use of SNS for academic purposes enhances the effect of SNS stressors on deficient SNS self-control.Originality/valueThis study further opens up the black box of the social media technostress phenomenon by documenting and validating novel processes (i.e. deficient self-control) and conditions (i.e. enhanced academic use) on which the negative impacts of SNS stressors depend.
How technostress and self-control of social networking sites affect academic achievement and wellbeing
E. Whelan,Willie Golden,Monideepa Tarafdar
Published 2022 in Internet Research
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2022
- Venue
Internet Research
- Publication date
2022-03-28
- Fields of study
Computer Science, Education, Psychology
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar
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