Social media addiction relationship with academic engagement in university students: The mediator role of self-esteem, depression, and anxiety


Journal article


Miguel Landa-Blanco, Yarell Reyes García, A. Landa-Blanco, Antonio Cortés-Ramos, Eddy Paz-Maldonado
Heliyon, 2024

Semantic Scholar DOI PubMedCentral PubMed
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APA   Click to copy
Landa-Blanco, M., García, Y. R., Landa-Blanco, A., Cortés-Ramos, A., & Paz-Maldonado, E. (2024). Social media addiction relationship with academic engagement in university students: The mediator role of self-esteem, depression, and anxiety. Heliyon.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Landa-Blanco, Miguel, Yarell Reyes García, A. Landa-Blanco, Antonio Cortés-Ramos, and Eddy Paz-Maldonado. “Social Media Addiction Relationship with Academic Engagement in University Students: The Mediator Role of Self-Esteem, Depression, and Anxiety.” Heliyon (2024).


MLA   Click to copy
Landa-Blanco, Miguel, et al. “Social Media Addiction Relationship with Academic Engagement in University Students: The Mediator Role of Self-Esteem, Depression, and Anxiety.” Heliyon, 2024.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{miguel2024a,
  title = {Social media addiction relationship with academic engagement in university students: The mediator role of self-esteem, depression, and anxiety},
  year = {2024},
  journal = {Heliyon},
  author = {Landa-Blanco, Miguel and García, Yarell Reyes and Landa-Blanco, A. and Cortés-Ramos, Antonio and Paz-Maldonado, Eddy}
}

Abstract

This research analyzed how addiction to social media relates to academic engagement in university students, considering the mediating role of self-esteem, symptoms of depression, and anxiety. A quantitative methodology was used with a non-experimental-relational design. A set of questionnaires was applied to a non-probabilistic sample of 412 students enrolled at the National Autonomous University of Honduras. On average, participants use 4.83 different social media platforms at least once a week. Instagram and TikTok users report significantly higher levels of social media addiction, symptoms of depression, and anxiety compared to non-users. Directly, social media addiction does not significantly influence academic engagement scores. However, there are significant indirect inverse effects on academic engagement. Symptoms of depression and self-esteem mediate these effects. Social media addiction increases symptoms of depression, which in turn decreases academic engagement scores. Social media addiction decreases self-esteem, which serves as a variable that significantly increases academic engagement. Overall, findings suggest that social media addiction has a total inverse effect on academic engagement; symptoms of depression and self-esteem mediate this relationship. The implications of these findings are discussed.