Ficha de revisão: Social Media Controversies and Impact

📋 Course Outline

  1. Social media controversy
  2. Social media usage survey
  3. Perceptions of social media effects
  4. Instagram and mental health
  5. Nuanced view of digital media
  6. Cyberbullying and suicide story

📖 1. Social media controversy

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Social media dilemma : A debate about whether social media helps or harms people, especially adolescents.
  • Social media controversy : A public dispute that weighs potential benefits of social media against potential negative effects.
  • Moral panic : A collective fear that frames a group and its behaviors as dangerously harmful, often exaggerating direct causes.

📝 Essential Points

  • The texts frame the social-media question as difficult because both advantages and disadvantages are often argued.
  • The dossier presents multiple perspectives rather than a single “effects only” conclusion.
  • Social researchers, psychologists, and sociologists are described as increasingly interested in this social phenomenon.

💡 Memory Hook

Dilemma = benefits vs harms; controversy = the fight over which wins.

📖 2. Social media usage survey

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Ranking question : A prompt asking students to order social platforms from most used to least used.
  • Daily time categories : Time ranges that classify how long a student spends on social apps each day.
  • Perceived main advantage : A choice of what students think is the best benefit of social media use.
  • Perceived biggest disadvantage : A prompt asking students to name the largest negative aspect linked to using social media.

📝 Essential Points

  • Students rank five platforms: Facebook, TikTok, Snapchat, Instagram, and YouTube.
  • The survey time options given are: less than one hour, between one and two hours, between three and four hours, and more than five hours.
  • Students choose an advantage option among: easy contact, rapid world information, expressing opinions and ideas, discovering like-minded people, or entertainment.
  • A preparation activity also asks students to mark statements as true or false about loneliness, comparison, identity, likes, solidarity, and self-esteem.

💡 Memory Hook

Survey blocks: rank apps, pick hours, choose advantage, name disadvantage.

📖 3. Perceptions of social media effects

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Perceived loneliness effect : The idea that social media can help young people feel less alone.
  • Social comparison : The tendency to compare oneself to others, which may intensify dissatisfaction when content highlights ideal appearances or status.
  • Unrepresentative content : The belief that what is shown on social media does not fully reflect real life.

📝 Essential Points

  • The preparation true/false set includes: social media can help youth feel less alone, and it can harm self-esteem.
  • The set also states that comparison on social media can be stronger than in real life, and that content is not representative of reality.
  • The set includes the claim that likes and comments influence behaviors too much, which students must judge as true or false.
  • One statement asks whether staying oneself is difficult on social media, and another asks whether social media brings people together more than it isolates.

💡 Memory Hook

Effects judgments repeat a theme: compare vs feel supported vs choose reality.

📖 4. Instagram and mental health

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Instagram image culture : A media environment where appearances and bodies are presented as ideal, shaping how users judge themselves.
  • Self-esteem problems : A decline in how people value themselves, described in the texts as worsened by pressures tied to appearance.
  • Suicidal ideation : Thoughts about suicide, described as appearing in some users according to the cited study.

📝 Essential Points

  • A 2019 Instagram study says “one in three” adolescents worsens their body relationship due to Instagram’s effects.
  • The same study reports higher levels of anxiety and depression among adolescents accused Instagram of increasing those levels.
  • The text attributes risks to issues like low self-esteem, anxiety, eating disorders (anorexia and bulimia), psychological distress, depression, and possible suicide.
  • It cites specific figures for adolescents reporting that dark thoughts appeared on Instagram: 13% in the UK and 6% in the US.

💡 Memory Hook

Instagram = image culture → comparison → self-esteem pressure → mental-health risks.

📖 5. Nuanced view of digital media

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Theory of media effects : A belief that media directly causes specific harms, leading people to look for a single causal impact.
  • Confirmation bias : A tendency to privilege information that confirms one’s prior intuition about digital media being dangerous.
  • Henry Jenkins quote : A claim that over-worrying about what the internet does to children makes us miss what children actually do online.
  • Correlation vs causation : A distinction between statistical links and direct causes, warning not to treat association as proof of harm.

📝 Essential Points

  • The open letter argues that Facebook’s own study design (focus groups) lacks scientific value and cannot provide statistical estimates of correlation between Instagram and mental health.
  • The letter claims direct “effects” like media causing violence, delinquency, dependence, or anxiety are not supported in the described scientific literature.
  • It states that compulsive or abusive behavior is treated as an indicator of individual trouble, not as a result of a technology prescribing addiction.
  • It argues that if problems correlate with media use, that does not mean media use causes those problems.
  • It states that many youths labeled “addicted to screens” are instead described as attached to friends and social engagement online.

💡 Memory Hook

Nuance = correlation≠cause, and confirmation bias can fuel panic.

📖 6. Cyberbullying and suicide story

🔑 Key Concepts & Definitions

  • Cyber extension on social media : The use of social platforms to reach friends and process exclusion when in-person connection fails.
  • Harassment by peers : Hostile treatment by classmates that increases isolation and suffering in the story.
  • School rooftop setting : The story’s high, secluded location where the attempt ends in tragedy.

📝 Essential Points

  • The narrator seeks lost friends “on Facebook” after being rejected by peers, showing online space as the replacement for belonging.
  • Peers mock the narrator with repeated insults (“grosse torche”), and they chant the same taunting message while hiding behind their screens.
  • The story’s ending shows the mother collapsing on-site, and a caretaker responding as the tragedy becomes public.
  • A final explanation links the ongoing absence of students to harassment and the earlier events, while the mother learns what she “didn’t see” about her child’s life.

💡 Memory Hook

Rooftop + insults + Facebook attempts = isolation that escalates beyond words.

📅 Key Dates

DateEvent
2019Instagram study cited about one in three adolescents and increased anxiety/depression
2020Mentioned as a year when similar studies were conducted by researchers cited in the first text
2021Cited for similar studies and referenced as the date source for the Instagram chronicle

📊 Synthesis Tables

Two stances on media harm

TextMain claimEvidence focus
Marc CassiviInstagram harms adolescents’ mental healthCited studies and reported percentages, plus described minimization by Facebook
Nina Duque and Dave AnctilEffects narratives are oversimplifiedQuestioning study validity and distinguishing correlation from causation

⚠️ Common Pitfalls & Confusions

  1. Confusing correlation and causation leads to believing that a link between media use and mental health automatically proves direct harm.
  2. Assuming all social-media effects are identical when the Instagram-focused text claims some problems are specific to Instagram.
  3. Treating a media-study design (like focus groups) as equivalent to scientific methods that can estimate statistical correlations.
  4. Reducing “online involvement” to addiction, even though the open letter frames many screen users as attached to friends and social engagement.
  5. Overlooking how peer harassment and exclusion interact with online spaces, rather than blaming only the technology itself.

✅ Exam Checklist

  1. Identify the dossier’s central debate on whether social media is beneficial or harmful, especially for adolescents.
  2. Recall the platforms listed for ranking (Facebook, TikTok, Snapchat, Instagram, YouTube) and the required usage ordering.
  3. Recall the daily time categories used in the survey options (less than one hour; 1–2; 3–4; more than five).
  4. Recognize the survey’s multiple-choice options for the perceived main advantage of social media.
  5. Recognize the survey prompt asking students to name the biggest disadvantage linked to using social media.
  6. Classify the true/false statements about loneliness, comparison, likes/comments influence, selfhood difficulty, solidarity, and representativeness of what is seen.
  7. For Instagram, state what the 2019 study claims about body relationship, anxiety/depression, and the risks listed.
  8. For Instagram, state the percentages given for suicidal-thought emergence (13% UK users; 6% US users).
  9. For the open letter, explain the distinction between correlation and causation and the warning against treating consequences as causes.
  10. For the open letter, identify confirmation bias and the idea that over-worrying makes us miss what youth do online.
  11. For the story, explain how Facebook is used by the narrator after peer rejection and how harassment escalates the tragedy.
  12. For the story ending, state what happens to the mother on the rooftop scene and how the absence of peers is explained.

Teste seu conhecimento

Teste seu conhecimento sobre Social Media Controversies and Impact com 12 perguntas de múltipla escolha com correções detalhadas.

1. What is a social media controversy?

2. What does the term moral panic describe in the context of social media debates?

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Revisar com flashcards

Memorize os conceitos chave de Social Media Controversies and Impact com 12 flashcards interativos.

Social media dilemma — definition?

Debate over benefits versus harms.

Social media controversy — role?

Public dispute weighing pros and cons.

Moral panic — effect?

Exaggerated collective fear.

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