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Linking social media addiction and student retention through the lenses of student engagement

Irfan Ahmad (WEB Department, Superior University, Lahore, Pakistan)
Umar Safdar (University of Buraimi, Buraimi, Oman)
Akram Somroo (Department of Mass Communication, University of the Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan)
Ali Raza Qureshi (Department of QEC, Lahore Garrison University, Lahore, Pakistan)
Abdul Khaliq Alvi (Department of Management Sciences, Lahore Garrison University, Lahore, Pakistan)

Journal of Economic and Administrative Sciences

ISSN: 1026-4116

Article publication date: 7 May 2024

21

Abstract

Purpose

This research is designed to explore the relationship between social media addiction, student engagement and student retention. Social media addiction is dealt with as an independent variable student engagement acts as a mediating variable and student retention as a dependent variable.

Design/methodology/approach

This is a cross-sectional and quantitative research. Primary data are collected from 600 respondents (university students) with the help of a structured questionnaire. Multistage sampling techniques, i.e. simple random sampling and judgment sampling, are used for the selection of respondents.

Findings

Results indicate that for direct relationships, social media addiction has a significant positive impact on student engagement and student retention, respectively, while student engagement is partially mediating the relationship between social media addiction with student retention.

Research limitations/implications

In the future, these kinds of research may also be conducted on students of different universities in Pakistan, which are located in other cities of Pakistan besides Lahore. This research provides a practical framework for the higher authorities of the universities of Pakistan and explains how the use of media positively fosters the levels of student retention directly and indirectly through the path of student engagement. It is commonly believed that media addiction is bad but the result of this research indicates that anything is not dangerous but depends upon its use, media addiction itself is not bad but if someone uses this for a good purpose in limitation then it has better outcomes. The result indicates that the media addiction of students has a positive impact on student retention. This means that if someone uses media for a positive purpose then he/she will use it as a supporting tool for success. Longitudinal research on these variables will also help to check the status after a specific interval of time.

Practical implications

The current study will help the practitioners or policymakers (Managers) of higher education institutions by providing practical insights into the positive use of media by students for increasing their knowledge and grades. This research can also help practitioners or policymakers to focus their students on the positive use of social media for fostering the levels of student retention.

Originality/value

To the best of the researcher’s knowledge, no previous study has been done to incorporate social media addiction and student engagement in a single model in the Pakistani cultural context. Similarly, the relationship of variables social media addiction with student engagement is rarely checked empirically because the research of Wang et al. (2011) proposed that social media addiction has a relationship with student engagement so that is why this is the rationale of the research is to check this empirically. Moreover, this study is an initial effort to check the mediating effect of student engagement in the relationship between social media addiction and student retention. This research is also proposing the framework of social media addiction, student engagement and student retention based on the social exchange theory (SET).

Keywords

Citation

Ahmad, I., Safdar, U., Somroo, A., Qureshi, A.R. and Khaliq Alvi, A. (2024), "Linking social media addiction and student retention through the lenses of student engagement", Journal of Economic and Administrative Sciences, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/JEAS-01-2022-0016

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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