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Correlates of Early Adolescents’ Social Media Engagement: The Role of Pubertal Status and Social Goals

Specific social media behaviors have been found to be differentially associated with adjustment outcomes; however, the extant research has yet to consider the motivations behind why adolescents engage in these specific behaviors. This study examined the role of two developmentally relevant motivatio...

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Published in:Journal of youth and adolescence 2022, Vol.51 (1), p.74-85
Main Authors: Swirsky, Jill M., Rosie, Michelle, Xie, Hongling
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description Specific social media behaviors have been found to be differentially associated with adjustment outcomes; however, the extant research has yet to consider the motivations behind why adolescents engage in these specific behaviors. This study examined the role of two developmentally relevant motivational correlates (social goals and pubertal status) on four social media behaviors (self-disclosure, self-presentation, social monitoring, and lurking) and two time-based measures of social media use (daily number of hours on social media and frequency of social media use). Self-report data were collected from 426 middle-school students (54.2% female, 73.6% White, 11.5% Black, 4.8% Hispanic, 10.1% other ethnicity, and mean age = 12.91). Social goals and pubertal status were distinctly associated with different social media behaviors, with some relevant sex differences. Popularity goal was positively associated with all six measures of social media engagement, although the associations for self-presentation and social monitoring were stronger for girls. Sex differences in lurking followed the same pattern but did not reach significance. Acceptance goal was associated with fewer hours spent on social media for girls only. Early developers reported more self-disclosure and lurking behaviors, and marginally more social monitoring (girls only). These findings indicate the importance of identifying motivational factors, especially social goals, when considering early adolescents’ social media behaviors.
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subjects Adolescent
Adolescent Behavior
Adolescents
Behavior
Behavioral Science and Psychology
Black white differences
Child
Child and School Psychology
Clinical Psychology
Early Adolescents
Empirical Research
Female
Gender differences
Girls
Goals
Health Psychology
History of Psychology
Humans
Law and Psychology
Male
Mass media effects
Motivation
Psychology
Puberty
Self disclosure
Sex differences
Social acceptance
Social Behavior
Social goals
Social Media
Social networks
Teenagers
title Correlates of Early Adolescents’ Social Media Engagement: The Role of Pubertal Status and Social Goals
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