Parental knowledge, monitoring, self-disclosure and teenagers’ risky Facebook behaviours in Singapore

Amidst widespread social concerns about teenagers’ safety and well-being in a digital age, the present study employs parental knowledge theory to investigate whether acquiring more parental knowledge can help reduce teenagers’ engagement in a variety of risky behaviours on social network sites. Spec...

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Main Author: Zhu, Li
Other Authors: Ang Peng Hwa
Format: Theses and Dissertations
Language:English
Published: 2014
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/60764
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-607642019-12-10T14:32:11Z Parental knowledge, monitoring, self-disclosure and teenagers’ risky Facebook behaviours in Singapore Zhu, Li Ang Peng Hwa Wee Kim Wee School of Communication and Information DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication Amidst widespread social concerns about teenagers’ safety and well-being in a digital age, the present study employs parental knowledge theory to investigate whether acquiring more parental knowledge can help reduce teenagers’ engagement in a variety of risky behaviours on social network sites. Specifically, this study proposes to understand, which source of parental knowledge or what parenting strategy (parental monitoring including both control and solicitation techniques, or teenagers’ self-disclosure) is more effective in this parenting process, and on what circumstances teenagers will openly and willingly disclose to their parents on social network sites that are largely regarded as a private space reserved only for friends but not family members. A survey was conducted in both paper-and-pencil and online formats among 170 dyads of teenage Facebook users, aged 13 to 18, and their parents in Singapore. The survey found parental knowledge as a valid theory within the context of social network sites in that the more parents knew about their teenagers’ activities and associations on Facebook, the less risky Facebook use (e.g. disclosing sensitive personal information, befriending online strangers, etc.) teenagers involved in, though such a relationship was not found in one specific risky Facebook behaviour, cyber bullying. Besides, while many teenager respondents claimed that their parents had most frequently employed parental solicitation strategy to regulate their Facebook use, both teenagers and their parents believed teenagers’ free and willing self-disclosure was also a significant contributor in obtaining parental knowledge. Further, teenagers’ self-disclosure, rather than parents’ active monitoring techniques, was identified as the only factor negatively correlated teenagers’ reduced risky Facebook use in this study. Good parent-teenager relationship, conversation-oriented family communication, and teenagers’ self-disclosure in real life were also found to positively correlate with teenagers’ self-disclosure on Facebook. Master of Communication Studies 2014-05-30T03:51:44Z 2014-05-30T03:51:44Z 2014 2014 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10356/60764 en Nanyang Technological University 121 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication
spellingShingle DRNTU::Social sciences::Communication
Zhu, Li
Parental knowledge, monitoring, self-disclosure and teenagers’ risky Facebook behaviours in Singapore
description Amidst widespread social concerns about teenagers’ safety and well-being in a digital age, the present study employs parental knowledge theory to investigate whether acquiring more parental knowledge can help reduce teenagers’ engagement in a variety of risky behaviours on social network sites. Specifically, this study proposes to understand, which source of parental knowledge or what parenting strategy (parental monitoring including both control and solicitation techniques, or teenagers’ self-disclosure) is more effective in this parenting process, and on what circumstances teenagers will openly and willingly disclose to their parents on social network sites that are largely regarded as a private space reserved only for friends but not family members. A survey was conducted in both paper-and-pencil and online formats among 170 dyads of teenage Facebook users, aged 13 to 18, and their parents in Singapore. The survey found parental knowledge as a valid theory within the context of social network sites in that the more parents knew about their teenagers’ activities and associations on Facebook, the less risky Facebook use (e.g. disclosing sensitive personal information, befriending online strangers, etc.) teenagers involved in, though such a relationship was not found in one specific risky Facebook behaviour, cyber bullying. Besides, while many teenager respondents claimed that their parents had most frequently employed parental solicitation strategy to regulate their Facebook use, both teenagers and their parents believed teenagers’ free and willing self-disclosure was also a significant contributor in obtaining parental knowledge. Further, teenagers’ self-disclosure, rather than parents’ active monitoring techniques, was identified as the only factor negatively correlated teenagers’ reduced risky Facebook use in this study. Good parent-teenager relationship, conversation-oriented family communication, and teenagers’ self-disclosure in real life were also found to positively correlate with teenagers’ self-disclosure on Facebook.
author2 Ang Peng Hwa
author_facet Ang Peng Hwa
Zhu, Li
format Theses and Dissertations
author Zhu, Li
author_sort Zhu, Li
title Parental knowledge, monitoring, self-disclosure and teenagers’ risky Facebook behaviours in Singapore
title_short Parental knowledge, monitoring, self-disclosure and teenagers’ risky Facebook behaviours in Singapore
title_full Parental knowledge, monitoring, self-disclosure and teenagers’ risky Facebook behaviours in Singapore
title_fullStr Parental knowledge, monitoring, self-disclosure and teenagers’ risky Facebook behaviours in Singapore
title_full_unstemmed Parental knowledge, monitoring, self-disclosure and teenagers’ risky Facebook behaviours in Singapore
title_sort parental knowledge, monitoring, self-disclosure and teenagers’ risky facebook behaviours in singapore
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/60764
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