Waikato Times

NZ teens among world’s biggest internet users

- John Gerritsen of RNZ

A report from the OECD’s Programme for Internatio­nal Student Assessment (PISA) shows New Zealand’s 15-year-olds spend more time on the internet than their peers in all countries except Denmark, Sweden and Chile.

It says results from the 2018 PISA tests show New Zealand teens are spending 42 hours per week online, well above the OECD average of 35 hours per week and

22 hours higher than in 2012 – equal with Costa Rica for the biggest increase of any of the 79 nations and economies in the study.

The report also found New Zealand was one of just five countries where use of digital devices at school was associated with better performanc­e in reading.

The PISA tests have shown a slow decline in New Zealand

15-year-olds’ achievemen­t in reading, science and maths during the past 18 years.

An education professor at the University of Auckland and chief scientific adviser to the Ministry of Education, Professor Stuart McNaughton, said there was not enough evidence to show increased screen time was to blame for falling achievemen­t in the PISA tests and other measures.

‘‘It’s a bit of a long bow at the moment.

‘‘We can’t link causally, easily, the increase in device use and use of the internet and the dropping reading achievemen­t scores, but it is certainly possible that there is a relationsh­ip,’’ he said.

McNaughton said it was clear that, apart from extreme high use, the amount of time spent online was not as important as what young people were doing while online.

‘‘The issue around the relationsh­ip or potential relationsh­ip with achievemen­t over years is whether or not the digital device usage, internet, social media, is somehow in conflict with or underminin­g our reading and writing activities, school-related or non-school-related,’’ he said.

McNaughton said the report showed that reading longer texts was associated with better reading scores, and the challenge was to find ways of ensuring young people were reading them.

The report said the time teachers spent using digital devices in class had a negative impact on students’ reading performanc­e in most countries, but New Zealand was one of five that bucked that trend.

‘‘The associatio­n between time spent using digital devices and positive performanc­e is only positive in Australia, Denmark, Korea, New Zealand and the United States,’’ the report said.

It said New Zealand 15-year-olds were using digital devices in class for about 84 minutes per week – less than Denmark, but more than the other three nations – and the associated increase in reading scores was higher than in the other countries.

It said browsing the internet for school work was the digital activity most strongly related to reading performanc­e and New Zealand was among countries where half or

more of students did that every day or almost every day.

Some activities, especially playing simulation­s, had a negative impact on students’ reading performanc­e.

The study found that, internatio­nally, teenagers who read printed books were better readers than those who read digital books or no books at all.

It also found that teens at schools that expected them to read texts longer than 100 pages were better readers. New Zealand had the 12th highest proportion of students at such schools.

The report said, across the OECD, 54 per cent of students said they were taught at school how to recognise if informatio­n was biased.

New Zealand’s teens scored well on questions testing their ability to discern opinion from fact, and were good at navigating the internet to find informatio­n from multiple sources.

It said 90 per cent of New Zealand students had access to a computer they could use for schoolwork and a link to the internet at home, though the figure ranged from about 80 per cent at lower-decile schools to more than 95 per cent at higher-decile.

It said enjoyment of reading had fallen in New Zealand and in many other countries and enjoyment was closely linked to high performanc­e in reading. New Zealand teens were reading for enjoyment for about 3.5 hours a week, slightly less than in 2009, but the same as in 2000 and the same as the OECD average.

The report found, internatio­nally and in New Zealand, that when students were reading online, fewer were spending much time reading emails than in 2009, but more were reading online chats (about 90 per cent, up from less than 60 per cent in 2009), reading online news, searching for informatio­n on a particular topic, participat­ing in online discussion groups, and searching for practical informatio­n.

 ??  ?? A report shows New Zealand teens are spending 42 hours per week online, well above the OECD average of 35 hours per week.
A report shows New Zealand teens are spending 42 hours per week online, well above the OECD average of 35 hours per week.
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