ABSTRACT

This book provides an in-depth insight into what is currently known and relatively unknown about youths’ online peer engagement. It delivers state-of-the-art current reviews of the literature in the field, with a strong coverage of methodological issues in studying online friendships and an emphasis on moving towards a new, less dichotomic, view of online peer interaction in adolescence.

With a focus on what spending time with online-exclusive peers entails – in terms of both potential positive as well as negative consequences for friendship quality, intimacy, and well-being – this book offers a more nuanced commentary on youths’ online peer engagement. Including coverage of the evolution of online friendships, cyberbullying, cyberdating, sexting, online abuse, smartphones, social networks, as well as their impact on adolescent social interaction online, Van Zalk and Monks consider implications for future research directions and practical applications.

Online Peer Engagement in Adolescence is important reading for undergraduate and master students studying social and developmental psychology, education, relationships and health, as well as advanced researchers and academics working in these fields.

chapter 1|17 pages

Online peer engagement in adolescence

Moving away from “good vs. bad” to brave new frameworks

chapter 2|17 pages

Buddies, friends, and followers

The evolution of online friendships

chapter 3|19 pages

Adolescent online friendships

The poor get poorer, or the rich get richer?

chapter 4|17 pages

Is online peer engagement bad for all youth all of the time?

The benefits and perils of online peer interactions

chapter 5|14 pages

Cyberbullying

A changing phenomenon

chapter 8|18 pages

“Digital adolescence”

The effects of smartphones and social networking technologies on adolescents’ well-being

chapter 10|15 pages

Adolescent relationships in a digital age

What do we know and where does the future lie?