Study extols online games virtue
PLAYING online games may boost teenagers’ school results while spending time on social networks such as Facebook could do the opposite, according to an Australian study.
The research, based on the performance of 15-year-old Australians in the globally recognized Program for International Student Assessment tests, looked at the relationship between internet usage and educational outcomes.
“The analysis reveals children who regularly use online social networks, such as Facebook, tend to obtain lower scores in math, reading, and science than students who never or hardly ever use these sites,” it said.
“Conversely, the analysis shows that those students who play online video games obtain higher scores on PISA tests, all other things being equal,” the study published in the International Journal of Communication yesterday said.
The study said it was possible that children who were already gifted in maths, science and reading were more likely to play online games.
But it added that while both gaming and socializing used time that teenagers could otherwise spend studying, video games “potentially allow students to apply and sharpen skills learned in school.”
“Students who play online games almost every day score 15 points above the average in maths and 17 points above the average in science,” study author Alberto Posso said. “When you play online games you’re solving puzzles to move to the next level and that involves using some of the general knowledge and skills in maths, reading and science that you’ve been taught during the day.”
Students who used online social networks on a daily basis scored 20 points lower in maths than a student who never used this type of social media, according to the study, which used the PISA ranking for 12,000 pupils from 2012 and controlled for other influences.
Internet usage among teenagers is considered particularly high in Australia where 97 percent of 15 to 17 year olds say they frequently go online.
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