Identifying the Moderating and Mediating Variables in Parental Mediation Practices in Nigerian Families in the Digital Age

This study examined the moderating and mediating variables in parental mediation practices in Nigerian families in the digital age. This study applied a multi-stage sampling technique to achieve an adequate representation of the population in six educational districts in Lagos, Nigeria. The study in...

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Main Author: Ifeanyi Adigwe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2021-07-01
Series:Social Media + Society
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051211033817
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spelling doaj-4301d3c8194c4ea4a1e6c367fc0a1e132021-07-25T03:03:33ZengSAGE PublishingSocial Media + Society2056-30512021-07-01710.1177/20563051211033817Identifying the Moderating and Mediating Variables in Parental Mediation Practices in Nigerian Families in the Digital AgeIfeanyi AdigweThis study examined the moderating and mediating variables in parental mediation practices in Nigerian families in the digital age. This study applied a multi-stage sampling technique to achieve an adequate representation of the population in six educational districts in Lagos, Nigeria. The study included 1,270 adult sample. Data were obtained through questionnaire from parents of children in the selected schools. Findings of the study showed that a strong and positive relationship exists between parent’s age and educational level and parent’s gender and educational level. These relationships were evident as strong moderating variables for the four mediation strategies measured in this study. It was found that, relating to the digital literacy of parents, the hierarchical regression analyses showed that only 7% of variance in parental mediation practice, in the case of participatory learning, was explained. By implication, the constructs of digital literacy are more relevant to participatory learning mediation practice compared to other parental mediation practices in the context of Nigerian families.https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051211033817
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ifeanyi Adigwe
spellingShingle Ifeanyi Adigwe
Identifying the Moderating and Mediating Variables in Parental Mediation Practices in Nigerian Families in the Digital Age
Social Media + Society
author_facet Ifeanyi Adigwe
author_sort Ifeanyi Adigwe
title Identifying the Moderating and Mediating Variables in Parental Mediation Practices in Nigerian Families in the Digital Age
title_short Identifying the Moderating and Mediating Variables in Parental Mediation Practices in Nigerian Families in the Digital Age
title_full Identifying the Moderating and Mediating Variables in Parental Mediation Practices in Nigerian Families in the Digital Age
title_fullStr Identifying the Moderating and Mediating Variables in Parental Mediation Practices in Nigerian Families in the Digital Age
title_full_unstemmed Identifying the Moderating and Mediating Variables in Parental Mediation Practices in Nigerian Families in the Digital Age
title_sort identifying the moderating and mediating variables in parental mediation practices in nigerian families in the digital age
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Social Media + Society
issn 2056-3051
publishDate 2021-07-01
description This study examined the moderating and mediating variables in parental mediation practices in Nigerian families in the digital age. This study applied a multi-stage sampling technique to achieve an adequate representation of the population in six educational districts in Lagos, Nigeria. The study included 1,270 adult sample. Data were obtained through questionnaire from parents of children in the selected schools. Findings of the study showed that a strong and positive relationship exists between parent’s age and educational level and parent’s gender and educational level. These relationships were evident as strong moderating variables for the four mediation strategies measured in this study. It was found that, relating to the digital literacy of parents, the hierarchical regression analyses showed that only 7% of variance in parental mediation practice, in the case of participatory learning, was explained. By implication, the constructs of digital literacy are more relevant to participatory learning mediation practice compared to other parental mediation practices in the context of Nigerian families.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/20563051211033817
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