Authorship Details
Publication Details
Resource Type:
Article
Publication Date:
Jan 2014
Publication Title:
TOJET: The Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology
Publisher:
The Turkish Online Journal of Educational Technology
Volume:
13
Issue or Number:
1 Summary
Students in institutions of higher learning should take advantage of information available on the Internet in their
coursework. The Internet is also utilised for social and other non-academic functions. Hence, it is desirable, for
students to strike a balance in the time spent online for academic and non-academic purposes. In this study, the
durations spent on the Internet for academic and non-academic purposes were investigated based on a survey on
1675 students randomly selected from five different fields of study, viz. social sciences, sciences, engineering,
agriculture and computer sciences. On average, the participants accessed the Internet 4.48 hours per day. There
were also significant differences in the time spent using the Internet among students in different fields of study,
with computer science students spending more time online (5.61 hours per day) than the others. In terms of
Internet use for academic purposes, students in social sciences, agriculture and computer sciences scored the
highest. In an analysis involving all the students in this study, the total time on the Internet was found to be
weakly correlated with the time spent online specifically for academic purposes. For social science students, a
low but significant positive correlation existed between the overall time spent online and the time spent on the
Internet for academic research. In a similar analysis carried out for science students, a negative low correlation
was observed. In the fields of agriculture, engineering and computer sciences, however, no correlation was
found between Internet access duration and the use of the Internet for academic purposes. The very low
correlations encountered above, even though statistically significant, showed that students who spent more time
on the Internet did not make much greater use of it for academic purposes as compared with students who used
the Internet less. (Abstract by authors)