TY - JOUR
T1 - YouTube Preferences and Practices of Preadolescents
T2 - Findings From a Study Carried Out in Catalonia
AU - Fedele, Maddalena
AU - Aran-Ramspott, Sue
AU - Suau, Jaume
N1 - Funding Information:
Her main research lines are children, young people and media, audio-visual fiction, and identities and media. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6664-0172 Email: [email protected] Address: Plaça Joan Coromines, s/n 08001 Barcelona, Spain Jaume Suau holds a PhD from Ramon Llull University, is lecturer at Ramon Llull University, based in Barcelona. As a member of “Digilab: Strategy Media and Regulation” research group has been project manager of the MedMedia, being a member also of the “Media Pluralism Monitor”, all projects funded by the European Commission. His research interests are audiences studies, news’ consumption and trust on news, as well as media regulation and media development. ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4480-4441 Email: [email protected] Address: Plaça Joan Coromines, s/n 08001 Barcelona (Spain)
Funding Information:
This study was supported by the Catalan Audiovisual Council (Agreement 49/2016) and by the Catalan Government (2017-SGR 868).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2021
Y1 - 2021
N2 - Recent data confirm the central role that YouTube plays in the media life of young people in the west, and especially in the media practices of adolescents and preadolescents. This article presents a study on tweens’ YouTube preferences and media practices. The study was based on the uses and gratification theory and applied a quantitative-qualitative approach: a questionnaire was administered to 1,406 preadolescents (x = 12, 11 years-old) from 41 secondary schools, and three focus groups with six participants (three girls and three boys) each were carried out in three schools. The results reveal that the tweens participating in the study consider YouTube as a social media and a video catalogue. They especially like YouTube’s content, in particular entertainment (music and humour) and self-learning (tutorials); however, they generally dislike its interactive functions (e.g., sharing and commenting). Moreover, their media practices on YouTube reveal that tweens incorporate YouTube into their everyday media life within other social media, although they use it predominantly to consume media content in a “traditional”/“non-interactive” way, similar to traditional television use. Despite this they do not consider it as a “new” television. Finally, tweens in our study use YouTube especially for entertainment, and, on a second level, for self-learning and socialising functions. Further studies need to be carried out to go deeper into the prosumption possibilities for tweens’ both on YouTube and other social media.
AB - Recent data confirm the central role that YouTube plays in the media life of young people in the west, and especially in the media practices of adolescents and preadolescents. This article presents a study on tweens’ YouTube preferences and media practices. The study was based on the uses and gratification theory and applied a quantitative-qualitative approach: a questionnaire was administered to 1,406 preadolescents (x = 12, 11 years-old) from 41 secondary schools, and three focus groups with six participants (three girls and three boys) each were carried out in three schools. The results reveal that the tweens participating in the study consider YouTube as a social media and a video catalogue. They especially like YouTube’s content, in particular entertainment (music and humour) and self-learning (tutorials); however, they generally dislike its interactive functions (e.g., sharing and commenting). Moreover, their media practices on YouTube reveal that tweens incorporate YouTube into their everyday media life within other social media, although they use it predominantly to consume media content in a “traditional”/“non-interactive” way, similar to traditional television use. Despite this they do not consider it as a “new” television. Finally, tweens in our study use YouTube especially for entertainment, and, on a second level, for self-learning and socialising functions. Further studies need to be carried out to go deeper into the prosumption possibilities for tweens’ both on YouTube and other social media.
KW - YouTube
KW - media practices
KW - media uses
KW - preadolescents
KW - tweens
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85111162171&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.17231/comsoc.39(2021).2714
DO - 10.17231/comsoc.39(2021).2714
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85111162171
SN - 1645-2089
VL - 39
SP - 145
EP - 166
JO - Comunicacao e Sociedade
JF - Comunicacao e Sociedade
ER -