Abstract

Background: Social media has now become a ubiquitous part of everyday life, especially for young people. This technology is a double-edged sword and can be used to empower or isolate users. This research is designed to enhance our understanding of how social media is being used by young people, how it affects them and their attitudes towards it.
 
 Results: This paper reports on the findings of a follow-up study to explore student feelings and attitudes and student preferences and self-perceptions when using technology. Earlier research examined emerging trends and changes in how students and staff use technology for learning and teaching and ownership of technology. This part of the long-term research project explored student attitudes and self-perceptions when using social media for personal use. Findings confirmed that there is a high use of Facebook amongst the young people in this study and their attitudes toward social media are more positive than negative. Participants felt that social media helped them to communicate with people from around the world, was easy to use for communication and could be used anywhere and at any time. They used social media most often to communicate with friends, colleagues, family and significant others, rather than people they did not know personally. However, they did use social media to build an online presence or profile and used this online platform to raise their status and for self-promotion to the wider community. Participants also admitted that social media impaired concentration, listening and completing activities in the classroom and sometimes caused personal relationship problems. A mobile phone is the device they use most often to access social media. Results also indicate that young people using social media in Thailand do not have a high level of concern about third-party access to their data. However, results from the study do not clearly show that using social media affects the ability of young people to communicate face-to-face. 
 
 Conclusion: The widespread use of Facebook amongst the Thai students taking part in this study was found to have both positive and negative effects on their communication, entertainment, academic and social lives, their sense of self and personal empowerment.

Highlights

  • 1.1 Introduce the ProblemThe use of social media platforms is widely popular in Thailand, amongst young people, with Facebook ranked as the leading social media platform

  • These results show that social media is an integral part of their everyday life

  • Social media has become a ubiquitous part of daily life especially for young people in Thailand who access platforms via their mobile phones (Gulatee & Combes, 2018b)

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Summary

Introduction

1.1 Introduce the ProblemThe use of social media platforms is widely popular in Thailand, amongst young people, with Facebook ranked as the leading social media platform. Many big Thai companies and small businesses use social media to promote and publish their services, and to sell their products They use social media platforms such as Facebook to target Thai customers in Thailand and overseas, an audience estimated to be more than 50 million people (Lexicon, 2019). Young people use Facebook to diarize and create visual logs of their lives They use it for communication, banking, online shopping, news gathering, and entertainment (Gulatee & Combes, 2018). This study aims to explore how young people in Thailand use social media, their understanding of the „good and bad aspects of social media‟, and their attitudes, feelings and self-perception when using social media

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