Idols of Serbian adolescents: Differences between two generations. Public figures as adolescents’ role models: What changed in 10 yeras?
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The work deals with comparison of idol preferences between 2 generations of adolescents.
The data were gathered within 2 research waves, in 2007 and 2018. The survey included
1283 secondary school students (1st and 3rd grade) from 26 schools in 10 Serbian cities in the
first wave, and 1358 students from the same grades, schools and cities in the second. The
idols and reasons for their appreciation were categorized in the same way and in accordance
with previous studies (Stepanović et al., 2009, 2017). However, in 2007 students stated their
reasons while in 2018 they estimated given reasons on the 5-point scale. More students from
the second wave have idols (61.9%) than those from the first (48.9%) (χ² = 45.575, df=1,
Cramer’s V = 0.13, p =.0,00). Ana Ivanović is the most popular person in the first wave,
appreciated by 2.6% of students who have idols. Novak Đoković is the most popular role
model in the second wave (6.9%). Idols preferences differ in 2 waves modestly (χ² = 16....576,
df = 6, Cramer’s V = 0.10, p = .0,11; with Bonferoni method adjustments). Students from the
first wave prefer sportsmen more than those from the second, while those from the second
admire show business stars and fictional characters more. Students from the second wave
prefer foreign idols to domestic, while such difference is not spotted in the first wave (χ² =
9.632, df = 1, Cramer’s V = 0.082, p < .01). Moreover, they prefer male idols over female
and such a trend did not exist in the first wave (χ² = 11.064, df = 1, Cramer’s V = 0.088,
p < .01). Factor analysis (Promax rotation) was performed on reasons students gave in 2007
and those estimated by students in 2018. For 2007, 3 factors were extracted, explaining 22%
of variance: 1) professional success; 2) fame, wealth and physical appearance; 3) social
power and personal traits. Three factors are extracted for 2018 (49% of variance): 1) fame,
wealth, physical appearance and social power; 2) personal traits and professional success; 3)
humanity and communicativeness. A growing number of adolescents who have idols and
higher appreciation of show business and fictional characters in the second wave, as well as
further analyses regarding show business subcategory, indicate influence of Internet and
social media on the younger generation having in mind that generation tested in 2007 was not
exposed to social media at that time.
Keywords:
adolescents / idols / two generationsSource:
BOOK OF ABSTRACTS OF THE XXVI SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE Empirical Studies in Psychology, 2020, 26, 105-105Publisher:
- Institut za psihologiju, Filozofski fakultet u Beogradu
- Laboratorija za eksperimentalnu psihologiju, Filozofski fakultet u Beogradu
Funding / projects:
Institution/Community
Psihologija / PsychologyTY - CONF AU - Stepanović Ilić, Ivana AU - Nikitović, Tijana AU - Mojović, Kristina PY - 2020 UR - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4410 AB - The work deals with comparison of idol preferences between 2 generations of adolescents. The data were gathered within 2 research waves, in 2007 and 2018. The survey included 1283 secondary school students (1st and 3rd grade) from 26 schools in 10 Serbian cities in the first wave, and 1358 students from the same grades, schools and cities in the second. The idols and reasons for their appreciation were categorized in the same way and in accordance with previous studies (Stepanović et al., 2009, 2017). However, in 2007 students stated their reasons while in 2018 they estimated given reasons on the 5-point scale. More students from the second wave have idols (61.9%) than those from the first (48.9%) (χ² = 45.575, df=1, Cramer’s V = 0.13, p =.0,00). Ana Ivanović is the most popular person in the first wave, appreciated by 2.6% of students who have idols. Novak Đoković is the most popular role model in the second wave (6.9%). Idols preferences differ in 2 waves modestly (χ² = 16.576, df = 6, Cramer’s V = 0.10, p = .0,11; with Bonferoni method adjustments). Students from the first wave prefer sportsmen more than those from the second, while those from the second admire show business stars and fictional characters more. Students from the second wave prefer foreign idols to domestic, while such difference is not spotted in the first wave (χ² = 9.632, df = 1, Cramer’s V = 0.082, p < .01). Moreover, they prefer male idols over female and such a trend did not exist in the first wave (χ² = 11.064, df = 1, Cramer’s V = 0.088, p < .01). Factor analysis (Promax rotation) was performed on reasons students gave in 2007 and those estimated by students in 2018. For 2007, 3 factors were extracted, explaining 22% of variance: 1) professional success; 2) fame, wealth and physical appearance; 3) social power and personal traits. Three factors are extracted for 2018 (49% of variance): 1) fame, wealth, physical appearance and social power; 2) personal traits and professional success; 3) humanity and communicativeness. A growing number of adolescents who have idols and higher appreciation of show business and fictional characters in the second wave, as well as further analyses regarding show business subcategory, indicate influence of Internet and social media on the younger generation having in mind that generation tested in 2007 was not exposed to social media at that time. PB - Institut za psihologiju, Filozofski fakultet u Beogradu PB - Laboratorija za eksperimentalnu psihologiju, Filozofski fakultet u Beogradu C3 - BOOK OF ABSTRACTS OF THE XXVI SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE Empirical Studies in Psychology T1 - Idols of Serbian adolescents: Differences between two generations. Public figures as adolescents’ role models: What changed in 10 yeras? EP - 105 SP - 105 VL - 26 UR - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4410 ER -
@conference{ author = "Stepanović Ilić, Ivana and Nikitović, Tijana and Mojović, Kristina", year = "2020", abstract = "The work deals with comparison of idol preferences between 2 generations of adolescents. The data were gathered within 2 research waves, in 2007 and 2018. The survey included 1283 secondary school students (1st and 3rd grade) from 26 schools in 10 Serbian cities in the first wave, and 1358 students from the same grades, schools and cities in the second. The idols and reasons for their appreciation were categorized in the same way and in accordance with previous studies (Stepanović et al., 2009, 2017). However, in 2007 students stated their reasons while in 2018 they estimated given reasons on the 5-point scale. More students from the second wave have idols (61.9%) than those from the first (48.9%) (χ² = 45.575, df=1, Cramer’s V = 0.13, p =.0,00). Ana Ivanović is the most popular person in the first wave, appreciated by 2.6% of students who have idols. Novak Đoković is the most popular role model in the second wave (6.9%). Idols preferences differ in 2 waves modestly (χ² = 16.576, df = 6, Cramer’s V = 0.10, p = .0,11; with Bonferoni method adjustments). Students from the first wave prefer sportsmen more than those from the second, while those from the second admire show business stars and fictional characters more. Students from the second wave prefer foreign idols to domestic, while such difference is not spotted in the first wave (χ² = 9.632, df = 1, Cramer’s V = 0.082, p < .01). Moreover, they prefer male idols over female and such a trend did not exist in the first wave (χ² = 11.064, df = 1, Cramer’s V = 0.088, p < .01). Factor analysis (Promax rotation) was performed on reasons students gave in 2007 and those estimated by students in 2018. For 2007, 3 factors were extracted, explaining 22% of variance: 1) professional success; 2) fame, wealth and physical appearance; 3) social power and personal traits. Three factors are extracted for 2018 (49% of variance): 1) fame, wealth, physical appearance and social power; 2) personal traits and professional success; 3) humanity and communicativeness. A growing number of adolescents who have idols and higher appreciation of show business and fictional characters in the second wave, as well as further analyses regarding show business subcategory, indicate influence of Internet and social media on the younger generation having in mind that generation tested in 2007 was not exposed to social media at that time.", publisher = "Institut za psihologiju, Filozofski fakultet u Beogradu, Laboratorija za eksperimentalnu psihologiju, Filozofski fakultet u Beogradu", journal = "BOOK OF ABSTRACTS OF THE XXVI SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE Empirical Studies in Psychology", title = "Idols of Serbian adolescents: Differences between two generations. Public figures as adolescents’ role models: What changed in 10 yeras?", pages = "105-105", volume = "26", url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4410" }
Stepanović Ilić, I., Nikitović, T.,& Mojović, K.. (2020). Idols of Serbian adolescents: Differences between two generations. Public figures as adolescents’ role models: What changed in 10 yeras?. in BOOK OF ABSTRACTS OF THE XXVI SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE Empirical Studies in Psychology Institut za psihologiju, Filozofski fakultet u Beogradu., 26, 105-105. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4410
Stepanović Ilić I, Nikitović T, Mojović K. Idols of Serbian adolescents: Differences between two generations. Public figures as adolescents’ role models: What changed in 10 yeras?. in BOOK OF ABSTRACTS OF THE XXVI SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE Empirical Studies in Psychology. 2020;26:105-105. https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4410 .
Stepanović Ilić, Ivana, Nikitović, Tijana, Mojović, Kristina, "Idols of Serbian adolescents: Differences between two generations. Public figures as adolescents’ role models: What changed in 10 yeras?" in BOOK OF ABSTRACTS OF THE XXVI SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE Empirical Studies in Psychology, 26 (2020):105-105, https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4410 .