Abstract
The university is currently involved in complex processes of open innovation through permanent dialogue with institutions and companies in the economic, social, and political fields. Professors, researchers, students, and other members of the institution take part in these processes. This is a phenomenon that has emerged in today’s network society due to digitalization and globalization. It is therefore essential, in this context of open innovation, to know the behaviors, habits, consumption, or lifestyles of university staff and students to achieve, in the best and most effective way, integration of higher education in this new reality. How we interact and communicate with the surrounding people has transformed with wider access to the Internet and the development of information and communication technologies (ICTs), especially through smartphones and the use of apps and social networks (WhatsApp, Twitter, Facebook, etc.). This digital revolution has reconfigured our interests, dispositions, and social participation. From the university field, knowing the interests of students who access the Internet is of vital importance to guide teaching methodologies, adapt content, facilitate communication processes, develop digital literacy practices, etc. The present research, focused on the Latin American sociocultural space, has a double objective: (GO1) to know which are the issues of most interest and consumption for university students; (GO2) to determine which issues they reject while they surf on the Internet. A quantitative research has been developed (n = 2482) based on the validated questionnaire COBADI®. The topics of greatest interest to the Latin American university students were, in this order: “use of social networks”, “news”, “music”, “education”, “work”, and “videos”. The fact that they put education in fourth place, as students, shows that it is not a high priority in their use of the network. On the opposite side, those that show more rejection are “celebrity journalism”, “online games”, and “pornography”. Among their topics of rejection is also “politics”, which is not prioritized by university students. These topics have been presented in different proportions according to the country analyzed, depending on their specific social and political circumstances, and have experienced a different evolution from 2012 to 2019—the time covered by the study.
Highlights
The university is one of the institutions with the greatest traditions
We have two major objectives: (GO1) to know which are the topics of greater interest and consumption for Latin American university students; (GO2) determine the topics that students reject or will not dedicate their time to while surfing the Internet
The present study shows the results corresponding to the research questions “What topics are you interested in seeing and consuming on the Internet?” and “What topics would you not waste your time consuming on the Internet?” analyzed by annual time cohorts and based on text mining analysis
Summary
The university is one of the institutions with the greatest traditions. Since the emergence and massive extension of the Internet, it has been configured as an exceptional space for access to information from anywhere in the world and any time of day, favoring immediacy in all processes. Young people around the world are increasingly using the Internet as their preferred means of accessing information [34,35]. Internet access and consumption is reaching more age groups, narrowing the digital divide that existed a few years ago [36]. According to Lidefer [38], the most daily habits related to websites are as follows: (1) Information search, (2) Instant communication, (3)
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More From: Journal of Open Innovation: Technology, Market, and Complexity
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