Split screening and blurred lines: what’s new in the children’s media landscape
DJS Research Ltd
Employee-owned & one of the fastest growing Market Research Agencies. Stockport, Leeds & remote workers throughout UK.
Written by Research Director,?Helen Menzies
Each year, the communications regulator Ofcom publishes a report examining media use
Dramatic and stimulating video grabs attention
One of the things that particularly interested me about?this year’s report?is the type of content that children and young people are drawn to.?The qualitative element to the research reveals an increased appetite for ‘dramatic’ content and explains that “gossip, conflict, extreme challenges, high stakes and often large sums of money were key features.”??Furthermore, the type of videos being watched online by the children in the research are described as “heavily edited to be very fast-paced, jumpy and stimulating.”??Children are faced with so much choice and these types of videos are helping content-creators to stand out.
We know that children and young people prefer short-form videos
Fact vs. Fiction
Both the qualitative and quantitative elements of the research explore the role of social media in detail, and how it is often used as a key source of information and news.?Ofcom’s News Consumption Survey found that almost three in ten children aged 12-15 used TikTok as a news source in 2022 (28%), up from 22% in 2021.????However, children are not always able to distinguish between fact and fiction.?Ofcom asked children aged 12-17 to review two social media posts – one real and one fake, and the results are cause for concern:
“Twenty-three per cent of children aged 12-17 who had claimed to be confident in their ability to differentiate between real and fake online, failed to identify the profile as fake. Although this proportion was down from 27% in 2021, it still means that nearly a quarter were overconfident in their ability, and in a position of potential vulnerability.”
领英推荐
Professional vs. personal spaces
YouTube continues to be the most used online platform among 3-17 year olds (88%), followed by WhatsApp (55%), TikTok (53%), Snapchat (46%), Instagram (41%) and Facebook (34%).?There are, of course, differences by age, although YouTube has a similar reach across all age groups.
The increasingly professionalised content on TikTok and Instagram feeds means fewer kids are likely to post content themselves on these platforms – perhaps as a result of feeling more self-conscious or unable to compete with the highly polished content they see.?A few years ago, we were more likely to see children creating their own content on these apps but now it appears to be a more passive experience.?
The qualitative research suggests children are making a clearer distinction between apps where they predominately consume more professional content (TikTok and Instagram) vs those for peer-to-peer interaction
The importance of research
Conducting research with children
If you’d like to chat more about research with children and young people please contact Helen Menzies, Research Director, at?[email protected]