Emotion regulation, e-learning readiness, technology usage status, in-class smartphone cyberloafing, and smartphone addiction in the time of COVID-19 pandemic

No Thumbnail Available

Date

2023

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Wiley

Open Access Color

OpenAIRE Downloads

OpenAIRE Views

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Organizational Unit
Public Relations and Advertising
(2000)
The Department of Public Relations and Advertising started its 4-year undergraduate degree program in 2000 under the School of Business. The Department of Public Relations and Advertising offers a program that stresses the skill of analytical thinking for students. The program is based on academic standpoints and supported by practices and new technologies. The department offers the opportunity to take elective courses from its own curriculum, or from other departments, in addition to theoretical and practical courses that complement each other. With a program offered in English, the Department of Public Relations and Advertising has mutual contracts with universities from Spain, the Netherlands and Finland within the scope of the “Erasmus Exchange Program”. In addition, the graduate degree program of “Public Relations and Advertising” under the Graduate School of social Sciences aims to sustain the continuity of undergraduate-level education and training, and to meet the demands of those pursuing to advance academically.

Journal Issue

Abstract

BackgroundThe COVID-19 pandemic has spread quickly, e-learning became compulsory and disseminated throughout the world. During the pandemic, smartphones are frequently used to access e-learning content, but connecting to technological tools increased the risk of cyberloafing during e-courses. Currently, there are a limited number of studies on how e-learning will evolve under compulsory conditions. ObjectivesThis study aimed to investigate the relationship between emotion regulation, e-learning readiness, technology usage status (TUS), in-class smartphone cyberloafing, and smartphone addiction (SA) of the students during the pandemic. MethodsIn total 1294 students participated in this study. A research model was tested by structural equation modelling. Results and ConclusionThe findings of this study indicated that there is a relationship between TUS and SA. Emotion regulation was related to SA. E-learning readiness levels can help to explain cyberloafing. This study presents a conceptual model of the variables that affect cyberloafing in the context of the e-learning environment.

Description

YILDIZ DURAK, Hatice/0000-0002-5689-1805; Gökçearslan, Şahin/0000-0003-3532-4251; Esiyok, Elif/0000-0001-9486-7067;

Keywords

e-learning readiness, emotion regulation, in-class smartphone cyberloafing, smartphone addiction, technology usage status

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

Citation

8

WoS Q

Q1

Scopus Q

Source

Volume

39

Issue

5

Start Page

1450

End Page

1464

Collections