Abstract:
This study examined the influence of social media language in essays of secondary
level students at Oti Boateng Senior High School, Koforidua – Ada in the New
Juabeng South Municipality. Three research objectives that guided this study were (1)
identify the elements of social media language used by students of Oti Boateng Senior
High School, (2) find out the linguistics categories of the social media language used
by the students and (3) examine how social media language influence the students’
English language writing. The nature of the study was qualitative with content
analysis being the research design. The data for the study was students’ essays.
Purposive sampling technique was adopted to ensure that students’ essays selected
have relevant social media language needed for the study with a sample size of one
hundred and fifty (150) respondents. The Social Learning Theory aided in the data
analysis supported by Microsoft excel. The findings indicated that social media
language has much influence on the writing of secondary level students with the
negative effects outweighing the positive effects. The students used elements like
abbreviations (11%), phonological contractions (33%) and acoustic representations
(36%) in their formal writing which are the effects of writing social media language
as students are more familiar with that type of language. Again, the data showed that
verbs were the most lexical items used scoring 24%; these verbs were action-oriented
and few stative ones. Interjections were the least with only 4%. It also showed
compound-complex structures were written most. The results of the analysis indicated
finally that students observed, imitated and modelled social media language since
students realised there was a meaningful reward for such a behaviour in the global
world. The study recommended that teachers enlighten students on the positive and
negative effects of writing social media language since the type of English they use on
social media is not accepted in academic writing and may affect their academic
performance at the end of their secondary education.
Description:
A Thesis in the Department of English Education, Faculty of
Foreign Languages Education, submitted to the School
of Graduate Studies, in partial fulfillment of the
requirements for the award of the degree of
Master of Philosophy
(English Language)
in the University of Education, Winneba