Staying connected with ICT tools: tracking youth respondents in a Chinese context

Abstract Young people have been perceived as a group that benefits most directly from China’s education aspirations and modernization campaign. Given their high social and spatial mobility related to education and career pursuits, it is intriguing but also difficult to follow them in panel studies....

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jing Song, Gina Lai, Odalia Wong, Xiaotian Feng
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2018-03-01
Series:The Journal of Chinese Sociology
Subjects:
ICT
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40711-018-0070-0
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spelling doaj-348bd2ecfcb046bc985165e3dd37daef2020-11-25T02:17:13ZengSpringerOpenThe Journal of Chinese Sociology2198-26352018-03-015111410.1186/s40711-018-0070-0Staying connected with ICT tools: tracking youth respondents in a Chinese contextJing Song0Gina Lai1Odalia Wong2Xiaotian Feng3Gender Studies Programme, The Chinese University of Hong KongDepartment of Sociology, Hong Kong Baptist UniversityDepartment of Sociology, Hong Kong Baptist UniversityDepartment of Sociology, Nanjing UniversityAbstract Young people have been perceived as a group that benefits most directly from China’s education aspirations and modernization campaign. Given their high social and spatial mobility related to education and career pursuits, it is intriguing but also difficult to follow them in panel studies. This methodology paper summarizes how the Panel Study of Nanjing High School Graduates explores different ways to track youth respondents with the aid of information and communication technology (ICT) tools. Rather than examining the tracking outcomes and attrition rates from a quantitative perspective, this paper discusses tracking strategies from a qualitative perspective based on a continuously updated understanding of youth development. The findings suggest that the use of ICT tools does not necessarily lead to the cooperation of youth respondents, and researchers have to make deliberate choices about how to use such tools to embrace diversity, enhance trust, and show respect for privacy. Given this overloaded information era and the ever-changing youth culture, this study explores the advantages and limits of ICT tools that require researchers’ local and contextualized knowledge to appropriate and combine different ICT tools in order to deal with the distrust and noncooperation of respondents in a virtual platform rather than merely relying on convenient ICT tools and material incentives.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40711-018-0070-0Panel studyICTYouthChina
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jing Song
Gina Lai
Odalia Wong
Xiaotian Feng
spellingShingle Jing Song
Gina Lai
Odalia Wong
Xiaotian Feng
Staying connected with ICT tools: tracking youth respondents in a Chinese context
The Journal of Chinese Sociology
Panel study
ICT
Youth
China
author_facet Jing Song
Gina Lai
Odalia Wong
Xiaotian Feng
author_sort Jing Song
title Staying connected with ICT tools: tracking youth respondents in a Chinese context
title_short Staying connected with ICT tools: tracking youth respondents in a Chinese context
title_full Staying connected with ICT tools: tracking youth respondents in a Chinese context
title_fullStr Staying connected with ICT tools: tracking youth respondents in a Chinese context
title_full_unstemmed Staying connected with ICT tools: tracking youth respondents in a Chinese context
title_sort staying connected with ict tools: tracking youth respondents in a chinese context
publisher SpringerOpen
series The Journal of Chinese Sociology
issn 2198-2635
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Abstract Young people have been perceived as a group that benefits most directly from China’s education aspirations and modernization campaign. Given their high social and spatial mobility related to education and career pursuits, it is intriguing but also difficult to follow them in panel studies. This methodology paper summarizes how the Panel Study of Nanjing High School Graduates explores different ways to track youth respondents with the aid of information and communication technology (ICT) tools. Rather than examining the tracking outcomes and attrition rates from a quantitative perspective, this paper discusses tracking strategies from a qualitative perspective based on a continuously updated understanding of youth development. The findings suggest that the use of ICT tools does not necessarily lead to the cooperation of youth respondents, and researchers have to make deliberate choices about how to use such tools to embrace diversity, enhance trust, and show respect for privacy. Given this overloaded information era and the ever-changing youth culture, this study explores the advantages and limits of ICT tools that require researchers’ local and contextualized knowledge to appropriate and combine different ICT tools in order to deal with the distrust and noncooperation of respondents in a virtual platform rather than merely relying on convenient ICT tools and material incentives.
topic Panel study
ICT
Youth
China
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40711-018-0070-0
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AT odaliawong stayingconnectedwithicttoolstrackingyouthrespondentsinachinesecontext
AT xiaotianfeng stayingconnectedwithicttoolstrackingyouthrespondentsinachinesecontext
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