'More time for MXit than homework'

290309 MXit – can you ‘bare’ it? You may have heard about tales of decadent juveniles and a little something called MXit – but is it as bad as people make out? asks Masood Boomgaard

290309 MXit – can you ‘bare’ it? You may have heard about tales of decadent juveniles and a little something called MXit – but is it as bad as people make out? asks Masood Boomgaard

Published Oct 12, 2011

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Johannesburg - Teens on MXit in South Africa spend more time chatting about their love lives than doing school work, according to a Unicef study released on Tuesday.

When respondents were asked what they did most at home, 30 percent said they chatted on MXit, the social media platform.

Sixteen percent said they watched television and movies, 13.5 percent said they did school work, 12 percent spent time with friends and four percent played computer games. Eight percent read and four percent spoke to relatives.

In response to the question of what they did most on MXit, 68 percent of respondents said they most often talked to family and friends, while 16 percent mostly talked to strangers or new friends.

Eleven percent said they chatted on MXit to get a girlfriend and five percent to get a boyfriend. It was not clear whether the attempts at forming relationships were with acquaintances or strangers.

The most common topic of discussion was love lives and dating (46 percent), while 22 percent of users reported that they most often gossiped with friends and family.

Nineteen percent spoke mostly about entertainment topics like music, sports, fashion, and games.

Other responses included school-related topics (seven percent), politics and global issues (three percent), and religion (less than one percent).

“This timely report provides an important piece of the puzzle to understanding the formation of mobile youth cultures; and exploring the role that cellphone applications play in the lives of young South Africans,” said Dr Tanja Bosch, senior lecturer at the Centre for Film and Media Studies at the University of Cape Town.

Seventy nine percent of respondents asked for age, sex, location and race (texted as ASLR) as opposed to only age, sex, location (ASL) when interacting on MXit.

Of those who asked the ASLR question, only five percent said they asked to know the race.

Four percent of respondents who added the “R” said it was because they preferred talking to certain races. Three percent said they wanted to know race in order to avoid racism.

This “interesting” aspect required more research, the study found.

Five percent said it is to know what language to speak, and six percent to learn about another culture. Thirteen percent asked for “safety” reasons.

Seven percent said they just wanted to get a mental picture of the person Ä and in a chat room without pictures or other details, the “ASLR” question become an important tool in getting an idea of another's appearance and may be tied to an intention to flirt.

Six percent asked it with a view to meeting the other person. Ten percent asked it to make conversation and nine percent asked out of habit.

Twenty six percent experienced insults on MXit - with 28 percent reporting the insults to be race-based. Insults based on location and gender were also common.

The study revealed that 75 percent of respondents talked to strangers at least once a week, while 42 percent did so every day.

The study was conducted by the United Nations Children's Fund (Unicef) in partnership with the Berkman Centre for Internet and Society at Harvard University, MXit, and the University of Cape Town.

It formed part of Unicef Youth's digital citizenship and safety project, in recognition of the potential for learning and empowerment such technologies offer.

MXit was created in South Africa in 2004 as a free instant messaging and social networking application for people aged 13 and up.

It has over 44 million registered user accounts in South Africa - with 55 percent male and 45 percent female. This figure includes “clone accounts”.

Users can send and receive text and multimedia messages in one-on-one conversations.

First and last name, gender, date of birth and a picture are only available when users exchange MXit ID details and become “buddies”, hence the question “ASLR”.

The sample size of the pilot survey was 25,876.

The minimum age on MXit is 13 years, but a small percentage of survey respondents reported their age to be 10- to 14-years old (six percent), while a very small number stated their age as five- to nine-years old (less than one percent).

About 44 percent of the respondents reported that they were in high school, while 17.7 percent were attending or had graduated from university.

Ninety one percent of respondents lived in urban areas, the rest in rural areas.

This was considered a “significant digital divide”, but it showed MXit had a presence in rural areas.

The majority of the respondents identified themselves as black (55 percent), followed by coloured (23 percent), white (14 percent), Indian (seven percent), and “other” (one percent). - Sapa

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