An interesting researchpaper by Maggie Kanter, Tamara Afifi and Stephanie Robbins. We often think kids are leaving Facebook if there parents join and that they dislike their folks being on the platform. Well, this research contradicts this in part. After parents “friended” their undergrad children on Facebook, there was no adverse effect on privacy but there was less conflict in their relationship
Abstract of the research:
This study examined whether a parent “friending” his/her child on Facebook.com influenced the parent–child relationship and perceptions of parental privacy invasions. One hundred and eighteen parent–young adult child dyads were randomly assigned to an experimental group where the parent was asked to create a Facebook account, “friend” his/her child, and use the account over 2 months or a control group where the parent did not have a Facebook account. Having a parent on Facebook did not result in perceptions of greater privacy invasions, but was associated with decreased conflict in the parent–child relationship. When the parent and child had a more conflicted relationship prior to the parent joining Facebook, the parent’s presence on Facebook also enhanced the child’s closeness with the parent.
[…] An interesting researchpaper by Maggie Kanter, Tamara Afifi and Stephanie Robbins. We often think kids are leaving Facebook if there parents join and that they dislike their folks being on the plat… […]
[…] Via Mashable vond ik deze infografiek. Voor alle duidelijkheid, vrienden worden met je kinderen op Facebook kan echt wel positief zijn (zie ook dit onderzoek). […]