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Sonia Livingstone

September 19th, 2018

Does excessive social media use actually harm the self-esteem of young people?

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Estimated reading time: 10 minutes

Sonia Livingstone

September 19th, 2018

Does excessive social media use actually harm the self-esteem of young people?

0 comments | 2 shares

Estimated reading time: 10 minutes

A Swedish survey has claimed that social media use negatively affects the self esteem of young people. But such studies must take into account the complex intertwining of online and offline worlds, and recognise that a sharp distinction  between life, relationships, and communication online and offline is no longer meaningful. Stine Liv Johansen is an Associate Professor at the Centre for Children’s Literature and Media at Aarhus University. She studies children’s media use in different contexts, most recently practices related to children’s use of YouTube. She is a member of the Danish Media Council for Children and Youth.

A recent article published on news site thelocal.se claimed that ‘excessive’ use of social media is related to low self-esteem among young Swedes (aged 12-16). The article was based on a survey by a Swedish insurance company about a campaign aimed at teen girls – #MissLyckad (a wordplay on Miss and the Swedish word for failed or unsuccessful). The campaign sought to help young women improve their self-esteem and encourage them to feel good about themselves. An obviously noble ambition. But what does the survey actually say? And what kind of conclusions may be drawn from it?

The campaign claims that, ‘young people feel bad because of social media’ and ‘the feeling of failure leads to lower self-esteem among young people’. The article as well as the survey fails to fully define what ‘excessive’ media use is, just as it does not show a specific link between the amount of time spent on media and low levels of self-esteem. This article is just one of many articles – the Atlantic piece by Jean Twenge perhaps being the most debated in the last year or so – that are based on a survey with a more-or-less valid foundation. This article and the study behind it is neither better nor worse than others. But one should stop and ask the question:

Is it social media that makes young people feel insufficient and unsuccessful?

The short answer is: we don’t know! This kind of study tells us very little about the specific meanings and uses of social media in relation to adolescence, well-being and identity (see for instance Larsen, 2016); instead it tells us something we may already know about what it means to be a teenager: that teenagers compare themselves to their peers and that they are constantly preoccupied with their own appearance and relations in public spaces – online as well as offline (ibid.). Are they thin enough, beautiful enough, stylish enough? How do they fit into the communities, they are part of? And where are the relevant role models – in school, in the media etc.?

Broader empirical studies provide nuances

Empirical research, in particular qualitative studies (for instance boyd, 2014 or Livingstone & Sefton-Green, 2016), has over the past decade contributed to an understanding of teen life in contemporary Western societies as highly intertwined with digital media use, and social media platforms in particular. Social media networks such as Facebook and Instagram have for many people – not only teenagers – become not only a place to go, but a fully integrated part of everyday life which means that a sharp distinction between life, relationships, and communication online and offline is no longer meaningful. Larsen and Kofoed (2016) in their study of Snapchat and intimacy, as well as my own work on tween’s use of digital media in relation to their interest for football (Johansen, 2016), exemplifies this point. This means that the publics and communities which teenagers refer to as part of their identity development, could just as easily be online as offline.

What does this mean in real life? It means that, for instance, a profile picture on a person’s social network profile should be considered a public appearance (boyd, 2010) and as such they would wish to make sure it represented them in the best possible way. One question in the #MissLyckad survey asks: ‘Is it important to you how your profile picture looks?’ A little over half of the respondents answered yes, and of those, slightly more girls than boys (Yes: boys (42%), girls (58%)), indicating perhaps – if anything – that more girls than boys consider this a relevant aspect of their public appearance. But this should not be taken as any kind of evidence regarding the meaning of social media per se. Profile pictures are just one of many ways we as individuals appear in public spaces and it is not a problem in itself if one puts a bit of consideration into this.

Comparison takes place online – and offline

Another question in the #MissLyckad survey asks young people whether they feel unsuccessful when comparing themselves to others online. The majority (58%) said ‘no’, 25% said ‘yes’ and 17% said ‘sometimes’. However this is a rather biased question, coupling the concepts of ‘online’ and ‘unsuccessful’ to suggest a direct connection between the two although there is no empirical evidence that online relationships should be more or less competitive than offline ones. Again this does not really say anything about what social media means. In order to deduce anything in particular about the impact of social media, you would have to also ask whether young people feel unsuccessful when comparing themselves to others in general, i.e. in school, on the street, in their family, at sports and so on. But perhaps the separation of possible factors relevant to young people’s well-being is not what is most important here. Instead, the connectedness and messiness of these factors in young people’s life – online and offline – must be seen as fundamental, which is why simplified questions and answers might not actually tell us much about life as it is lived by young people today.

Talk to them

The most important takeaway from this study is that young people (a little over half of them in the survey, at least) are eager to talk about their use of social media, their well-being and their relations to their peers. They would like adults – which would often mean their teachers – to engage in discussions about this with them. This is something everyone who is involved with young people on a regular basis should take into consideration. How do we provide the space (and time) for an unbiased, non-judgemental and non-panicked talk about the things that matter to young people today – online or offline? One answer is to not jump on the media-panic bandwagon and not take media headlines at face value, and instead start talking to young people about their lives as they are played out and performed in the 21st Century.

Notes


The campaign (in Swedish) with links to the full study can be found at http://misslyckad.se/

This post gives the views of the author and does not represent the position of the LSE Parenting for a Digital Future blog, nor of the London School of Economics and Political Science.

References:

Johansen, Stine Liv (2016): Being a Football Kid. Football as a Mediatised Play Practice. In: Schwell et.al. (ed.): New Ethnographies of Football in Europe. People, Passions, Politics. Palgrave MacMillan

About the author

Sonia Livingstone

Sonia Livingstone OBE is Professor of Social Psychology in the Department of Media and Communications at LSE. Taking a comparative, critical and contextual approach, her research examines how the changing conditions of mediation are reshaping everyday practices and possibilities for action. She has published twenty books on media audiences, media literacy and media regulation, with a particular focus on the opportunities and risks of digital media use in the everyday lives of children and young people. Her most recent book is The class: living and learning in the digital age (2016, with Julian Sefton-Green). Sonia has advised the UK government, European Commission, European Parliament, Council of Europe and other national and international organisations on children’s rights, risks and safety in the digital age. She was awarded the title of Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 2014 'for services to children and child internet safety.' Sonia Livingstone is a fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences, the British Psychological Society, the Royal Society for the Arts and fellow and past President of the International Communication Association (ICA). She has been visiting professor at the Universities of Bergen, Copenhagen, Harvard, Illinois, Milan, Oslo, Paris II, Pennsylvania, and Stockholm, and is on the editorial board of several leading journals. She is on the Executive Board of the UK Council for Child Internet Safety, is a member of the Internet Watch Foundation’s Ethics Committee, is an Expert Advisor to the Council of Europe, and was recently Special Advisor to the House of Lords’ Select Committee on Communications, among other roles. Sonia has received many awards and honours, including honorary doctorates from the University of Montreal, Université Panthéon Assas, the Erasmus University of Rotterdam, the University of the Basque Country, and the University of Copenhagen. She is currently leading the project Global Kids Online (with UNICEF Office of Research-Innocenti and EU Kids Online), researching children’s understanding of digital privacy (funded by the Information Commissioner’s Office) and writing a book with Alicia Blum-Ross called ‘Parenting for a Digital Future (Oxford University Press), among other research, impact and writing projects. Sonia is chairing LSE’s Truth, Trust and Technology Commission in 2017-2018, and participates in the European Commission-funded research networks, DigiLitEY and MakEY. She runs a blog called www.parenting.digital and contributes to the LSE’s Media Policy Project blog. Follow her on Twitter @Livingstone_S

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