2023
DOI: 10.37134/jsml.vol11.2.6.2023
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Gender Variations in Social Media Usage and Its Perceived Impact on The Academic Performance of Nigerian Science Undergraduates

Olusegun Emmanuel Ogundele,
Uchenna Nwoye Ogbonnaya,
Adebola Daniel Awofodu
et al.

Abstract: University students frequently use social media, which has an impact on their everyday life, but the impact may differ by gender and other circumstances. The purpose of this study was to examine how social media usage differs by gender and how this is believed to affect the academic performance of undergraduate science students in Nigeria. This descriptive survey comprises a sample of randomly selected 464 undergraduate science students of Tai Solarin University of Education, Nigeria. The students' social medi… Show more

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“…This might be caused by the majority of the respondents often spending their time every day on social media 15 minutes before sleep, after waking up, eating breakfast, lunch, and supper, according to the results of the Social Media Engagement Questionnaire (SMEQ). The current results also align with those of Ogundele et al (2023), who showed that 90% of the respondents spent at least an hour on social media daily, which caused no significant gender difference. Besides, a study by Kamal et al (2022) also indicated no significant difference between social media engagement and gender.…”
Section: Difference Of Gender On Social Media Engagement Body Surveil...supporting
confidence: 89%
“…This might be caused by the majority of the respondents often spending their time every day on social media 15 minutes before sleep, after waking up, eating breakfast, lunch, and supper, according to the results of the Social Media Engagement Questionnaire (SMEQ). The current results also align with those of Ogundele et al (2023), who showed that 90% of the respondents spent at least an hour on social media daily, which caused no significant gender difference. Besides, a study by Kamal et al (2022) also indicated no significant difference between social media engagement and gender.…”
Section: Difference Of Gender On Social Media Engagement Body Surveil...supporting
confidence: 89%