Forskningsradar
← Social Policy
Social Policy 3.1

Students flock to teacher videos on YouTube and TikTok—but for grades, not growth

A survey of over 1,000 students reveals that educational videos on social media are reshaping how young people learn—driven almost entirely by a desire for better test scores rather than deeper understanding. The finding raises urgent questions for educators and policymakers about whether this shift serves students' long-term development or merely optimizes short-term performance.

Originaltitel: Formal teaching enters social media: students' perspectives on teachers' educational videos on YouTube and TikTok

Abstrakt

<p>This article aims to contribute to an in-depth discussion about what teachers' educational videos on social media mean from the students' perspective and to explore further questions related to the broader purposes of education. Based on a student survey, in which a total of 1065 lower and upper secondary students participated, we analyse usage patterns and students' understandings of teachers' educational videos on social media as resources for learning. Based on Drotner's work on discourses about informal learning, students' answers to open-ended questions about educational videos on social media were analysed, using thematic content analysis. Four main themes were found, concerning positive and negative aspects in relation to individual learning, social media versus regular teaching, student diversity and a connected generation. The analysis shows how a functionalist discourse is dominant, where the use of educational videos is seen as a means of achieving better results. The findings highlight that teachers' educational videos have implications for the individual student, for the relationship to teaching and regular education and to broader societal implications as pedagogical relations become embedded into social media's platform economies.</p>

Generera ett redaktionellt utkast på svenska