| Literature DB >> 27635367 |
Ibeawuchi K Enwereuzor1, Leonard I Ugwu1, Dorothy I Ugwu2.
Abstract
There are growing concerns that seem to suggest that students no longer engage in school-related activities as they ought to. Recent observation has revealed that students now spend excessive time participating in Internet gambling with their smartphone during school period. This trend could have far-reaching consequences on their schoolwork engagement and by extension, academic performance. Drawing on the Dualistic Model of Passion, this study therefore, examined the mediatory role of smartphone addiction in the gambling passion-schoolwork engagement relation. A cross-sectional design was adopted. Male undergraduates (N = 278) of a large public university in Nigeria who engage in Internet gambling participated in the study. They completed self-report measures of gambling passion, smartphone addiction, and schoolwork engagement. Results showed that harmonious gambling passion was not related to smartphone addiction whereas it was positively related to schoolwork engagement. Obsessive gambling passion had positive and negative relations with smartphone addiction and schoolwork engagement, respectively. Smartphone addiction was negatively related to schoolwork engagement and mediated only the obsessive gambling passion-schoolwork engagement relation but not that between harmonious gambling passion and schoolwork engagement. The theoretical and practical implications of the findings are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Gambling passion; Harmonious gambling passion; Obsessive gambling passion; Schoolwork engagement; Smartphone addiction
Year: 2016 PMID: 27635367 PMCID: PMC5002047 DOI: 10.1186/s40405-016-0018-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Asian J Gambl Issues Public Health ISSN: 2195-3007
Fig. 1Proposed theoretical model of the relationship between gambling passion, smartphone addiction and schoolwork engagement
Means, standard deviations, alpha coefficients, and correlations among the study variables
| Variable |
|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. Age | 22.39 | 3.30 | – | ||||
| 2. Harmonious passion | 28.14 | 2.87 | −.23*** | (.84) | |||
| 3. Obsessive passion | 8.27 | 2.55 | −.10 | .11 | (.84) | ||
| 4. Smartphone addiction | 18.55 | 4.02 | −.13* | .06 | .27*** | (.76) | |
| 5. Schoolwork engagement | 46.09 | 3.30 | −.06 | .18** | −.11 | −.19*** | (.77) |
Cronbach’s alpha coefficients for the scales are on the diagonal of the matrix in parentheses
N = 278, * p < .05 (two-tailed); ** p < .01 (two-tailed); *** p < .001 (two-tailed)
Fig. 2Results of hierarchical multiple regression of predictors of schoolwork engagement. Note *p < .05; **p < .01; ***p < .001. The numerical values on the arrows pointing to smartphone addiction are beta weights taken from the first regression while those pointing to schoolwork engagement are taken from the second regression
Mediating effect of smartphone addiction in the gambling passion—schoolwork engagement relation
| Indirect effect pathways | Estimate | BC 95 % CI | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lower | Upper | ||
| HGP | −.004 | −.020 | .010 |
| OGP | −.034* | −.073 | −.010 |
BC bootstrapping results were based on 1000 bootstrapped samples
BC bias corrected, CI confidence interval, HGP harmonious gambling passion, OGP obsessive gambling passion, SA smartphone addiction
* p < .05