MENTAL HEALTH AND SOCIAL NETWORKING ADDICTION AMONG HIGHER SECONDARY SCHOOL STUDENTS IN NAGALAND: A DESCRIPTIVE STUDY
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Abstract
The greater use of social networking sites by students leads to unhealthy addiction that may have an impact on their mental health. The study examines the relationship between the mental health of higher secondary school students and their addiction to social networking. In the study, a descriptive survey method was used, and 500 students (198 boys and 302 girls) from private and government higher secondary schools in Nagaland participated. Two research instruments, the Mental Health Scale (Jagdish & Srivastava, 2005) and the Social Networking Addiction Scale (Shahnawaz & Rehman, 2020), were adopted and revalidated in the context of Nagaland. The t-test, correlation, and percentage were employed to analyze the data. The study found that 55.8% students have below average to average levels of mental health, and 95% students have an average level of social networking addiction. No significant difference was found in the scores for social networking addiction between boys and girls (t=1.766, p > .001), government and private secondary school students (t=1.128, p > .001). There is a substantial difference in the mental health scores of boys and girls (t=6.667, p < .001), while no significant differences were found between government and private secondary school students (t=1.029, p > .001). The study also found a significant correlation between social networking addiction and the mental health of secondary school students. The findings of the study suggest that increased social networking addiction affects the mental health of students, highlighting the need for awareness, guidance, proper counselling, and effective and restricted use of social media among secondary school students.
JEL Classification Codes: I300, I120, I12, I120.
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