Daily Gadget Use and Study Habits of Grade 6 Pupils at Mangan Elementary School: A Descriptive-Correlational Study
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20512699Keywords:
academic duties, daily gadget activities, digital wellness, elementary pupils, gadget use, study habitsAbstract
Elementary pupils increasingly use gadgets for entertainment, communication, and academic tasks. This study examined daily gadget use and study habits among Grade 6 pupils at Mangan Elementary School to inform digital-wellness practices and school guidance. A descriptive-correlational design was employed. Thirty Grade 6 pupils were selected through purposive sampling based on their access to and use of gadgets. Data were collected using a researcher-adapted 20-item questionnaire consisting of academic-duty and behavior-and-daily-activity domains. Weighted means were used for descriptive analysis. The source manuscript also reported a Pearson product-moment correlation coefficient computed from paired domain-item means. Results showed that pupils agreed that gadget use influenced academic duties and study habits (M = 3.597). They were neutral regarding its effects on behavior and daily activities (M = 2.734). Pupils strongly recognized the usefulness of gadgets for completing tasks (M = 4.47), communication (M = 4.57), and stress relief or entertainment (M = 4.23), while generally disagreeing that gadget use caused absenteeism (M = 1.32), late sleeping (M = 1.77), or skipped meals (M = 1.80). The reported item-level association was moderate and positive (r = .47). Because the coefficient was derived from ten paired item means rather than individual pupil scores, it should be interpreted as exploratory and not as a respondent-level inferential test. The study concludes that gadgets can support learning when used purposefully, but structured monitoring remains necessary to protect attention, time management, and study routines.
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