Quality of Parent-child Communication, Self-esteem, and
Smartphone Addiction on Generation Z Adolescent
Milka Malva Rohi, Danny Ontario Rusmono, Livianinda Nur Malicha, Dyah Novrina Purnama,
Annisa Taqwa Zazi and Achmad Chusairi
Faculty of Psychology Airlangga University Jalan Airlangga No. 4-6, Surabaya, 60115, Indonesia
Keywords: Smartphone Addiction, Parent-child Communication Quality, Self-esteem, Adolescent High School
Students.
Abstract: Teenagers today often own and use smartphones, but uncontrolled excessive use can put a risk of smartphone
addiction. This study aimed to determine the correlation between the quality of parent-child communication
and Self-esteem with the smartphone addiction on Z-generation teenagers in high school (High School)
groups. This research uses a quantitative approach. The sampling technic of this research is purposive
sampling. Subjects in this research are 100 high school students aged 15-18 years. Data collection is done by
survey method using a questionnaire. Measuring instruments used in this study include: SAS-SV (Short
Version of Smartphone Addiction Scale) to measure smartphone addiction, communication quality scale of
parent and children developed by researchers based on communication quality theory from De Vito, and
SLSC-R (Self-Liking and Self-Competance Scale Revised) to measure Self-esteem. Data analysis using
correlation test with SPSS 22.0 for Windows. The results showed that there was no significant correlation
between the quality of parent-child communication with smartphone addiction and Self-esteem with
smartphone addiction.
1 INTRODUCTION
Adolescence is a period of human development
which includes biological, psychological, and social
maturity as a transition from childhood to adulthood.
Today's teenagers generally belong to generation Z,
which was born since 1998 (Tapscott, 2008). In the
process, adolescents are often overwhelmed by great
curiosity so that adolescents explore their world
and it is a form of searching for identity.
In the era of generation Z teenagers, the use of
smartphones or smart cellular phones facilitated by
various applications and the internet, has grown with
the influence of globalization, including in
Indonesia. Smartphones provide several
conveniences for teenagers, such as fast access to
information and can make people able to have
communication with peers, family, and the wider
community, even in a long distance. With the
internet in it, people can access several social media
platforms such as Facebook, WhatsApp, Line,
Instragam, and others.
The Association of Indonesian Internet Service
Providers (APJII), stated that internet users in 2017
reached 143.26 million people (Setiawan, 2018).
This shows that more than half of Indonesia's
population has used the internet, including
teenagers. Data from the Nielsen survey institute
(2014) shows that the average smartphone use in
Indonesia is 189 minutes per day or about three
hours.
Common Sense Media (a non-profit organization
focused on helping children, parents, teachers and
policy makers with media and technology in
America), which conducted research in 2016 in San
Francisco, California, found that 50% of teens admit
to gadget addiction. The study involved 1.240
parent- children, ages 12 to 18 years. The result is
that 66% of parents feel their teens spend too much
time on gadgets, and 52% of these teens agree with
this.
Firmana (2016) in a study on the use and
utilization of smartphones among high school
students, stated that the level of smartphone
ownership among students can be categorized as
very high. In addition, teens especially the high
school students also use several social media
320
Rohi, M., Rusmono, D., Malicha, L., Purnama, D., Zazi, A. and Chusairi, A.
Quality of Parent-child Communication, Self-esteem, and Smartphone Addiction on Generation Z Adolescent.
DOI: 10.5220/0010812000003347
In Proceedings of the 2nd International Conference on Psychological Studies (ICPsyche 2021), pages 320-326
ISBN: 978-989-758-580-7
Copyright
c
2022 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
applications to exchange information such as sharing
subject matter, asking for schedules, and related to
school activities through various application
features. However, the use of smartphones does not
mean that it always has a positive impact on students
in their adolescence.
Research conducted by Muflih, Hamzah, &
Puniawan (2017) shows that there is a significant
correlation between smartphone use and smartphone
addiction. Hovart (Riani, 2016) states that
dependence or what is termed addiction is an
activity or substance that is carried out repeatedly
and can have a negative impact which is
characterized by high intensity on smartphone use,
unable to control smartphone use, feelings of anxiety
and restlessness appear when not using smartphones,
as well as social relationships with the environment
and those closest to them have problems.
The existence of smartphone addiction can have
an impact on psychological problems. A news report
from Liputan 6 on January 2018 informed that
smartphone addiction caused two students who were
still in junior high and high school to enter a mental
hospital in Bondowoso, East Java. The two students
were taken for treatment to the Mental Polyclinic of
RSUD Koesnadi Bondowoso by their parents
because they experienced drastic personality
changes, such as not wanting to go to school for
several months, and hurting themselves when asked
to take off their gadgets.
Agusta (2016) in his research on the risk factors
for smartphone addiction in adolescents found that
there are four factors that influence smartphone
addiction, such as external factors, situational
factors, social factors, and internal factors. Some of
these factors, namely external factors that explain the
influence of media on exposure to smartphones and
the various facilities provided, situational factors
that explain where a person feels comfortable when
using smartphones both in their own and in groups,
as well as social and internal factors which will be
explained in more detail below.
Social factors have aspects of individual needs in
social interaction. Although it creates its own fun, the
presence of smartphones makes teenagers often
focus more on smartphones than communicating with
those around them. Effendy (2003) states that
essentially interpersonal communication is
communication between communicators (the person
who delivers the information) and communicants
(the person who receives the information), where this
type of communication is considered the most
effective in an effort to change a person's attitude,
opinion or behavior. With the dialogical nature of
communication in the form of conversation, the
communicator can know the quality of the
communication, that is, if the communication is
positive or negative.
In the dynamics of communication, adolescents
according to research from Bukowski, Motzoi, &
Meyer, 2009; Laursen & Pursell, 2009 (Santrock
2012), are more dependent on their peers than their
parents. One of the characteristics of adolescence is
wanting freedom from adults. However, adolescents
are not directly independent without parents, but it is
the attachment of parents that can increase the
possibility of adolescents having good social skills
(Santrock, 2012).
Based on Cho & Lee (2017), the role of parents,
such as self-reflection from parents, is needed to
counteract the negative effects of smartphone use on
children. According to Kwak, Kim, and Yoon
(2018), parental neglect is significantly associated
with dependence or excessive use of smartphones
among adolescents. Misaghi, et al (2018) in their
research on family functioning accompanied by a
generation gap also showed a significant negative
correlation with smartphone addiction. Another study
by Chasanah and Kilis (2018) on the effect of gadget
addiction on family functioning shows that gadget
addiction also affects family functioning, but its
effect on communication aspects is smaller than
other aspects.
Internal factors describe individual
characteristics and are the factors that most influence
smartphone addiction. Internal factors have three
aspects, namely weak self-control, high sensation-
seeking nature, and low self- esteem.
As smartphones generally contain social media
that can expand friendships or kinship with other
people in cyberspace, teenagers become interested in
using smartphones. This is done in order to get an
increase in Self-esteem and existence in the
community because many of today's generation Z
teenagers also have smartphones. According to a
teenager digital observer, Peg Streep (in Felita et al.,
2016) suggests that the basic reason why teenagers
become social media maniacs is because they want to
seek attention, ask for opinions, grow their image,
and morever they are already addicted or become
dependent on smartphone use. From the results of
a survey conducted by Felita et al (2016) who tried
to examine adolescent self-concept and use of social
media, most teenagers want to look good and display
an image of their ideal self-concept (ideal-self) on
their social media profiles, even though it is not in
accordance with their real self-concept (real-self)
they have.
Quality of Parent-child Communication, Self-esteem, and Smartphone Addiction on Generation Z Adolescent
321
The incompatibility of adolescent self- concept
with their ideal self will cause low self- esteem.
According to Tafarodi and Swann (1995), there are
two dimensions of Self-esteem, such as self-liking
and self-competence. Self- liking is an evaluation of
one's own experience in social interactions, which
can be good or bad, while self-comptence is also an
evaluation about self-experience regarding the
results of the efforts or pratices someone made
(Harre, in Tafarodi and Swann, 1995). A teenager
with low Self-esteem tries to improve his self-image,
one of which is by using a smartphone to access social
media as it has been mentioned that teenagers
actually need support from others to feel more
valued (Kurcaburun in Mulyana and Arifani, 2017).
According to the research conducted by Ehrenberg
et al (2008), people with low Self-esteem will more
often use social media to write messages. Research
by Kim (2016) and Mulyana and Arifani (2017) also
proves that there is a negative correlation between
Self-esteem and smartphone addiction, in which the
lower the Self-esteem of a teenager, the higher the
tendency for smartphone addiction.
From other studies, such as that conducted by
Pugh (2017), it was found that Self-esteem did not
have a significant correlation with smartphone
addiction. Shaw and Gant (in Pugh, 2017) through
their research in 2002 also found contradictory
research results, that internet addiction was actually
positively related to Self-esteem and this was
explained to be related to a person's reduced sense of
loneliness.
Smartphone addiction in this study is explained
as a condition in which a person cannot be separated
from his/her smartphone. Smartphone addiction can
occur because of using them too often, which begins
with the stage of habituation to create a
dependence.
Kwon et al (Mulyana & Afriani, 2017)
developed smartphone addiction or dependence on
smartphones measured in five aspects, namely daily-
life disturbance (interruption of daily activities),
withdrawal (not being able to stay away from
smartphones because of anxiety, including feeling
uncomfortable when disturbed). while playing
smartphones), cyberspace-oriented relationship
(socializing more with smartphones), overuse
(excessive and uncontrolled use), and tolerance
(failure to control smartphone use).
The quality of communication in this study
focuses on the quality of interpersonal
communication (parent-child), namely the process of
delivering messages through conversations that
occur between parents and children. Parents need to
make sure the communication takes place in a
positive way which is related to interpersonal
communication. De Vito (Marthiani, 2015) states
that interpersonal communication is the process of
sending and receiving messages between two people
or a small group of people with various impacts and
opportunities to provide immediate feedback.
Effendy (2003) states that essentially interpersonal
communication is a communication between
communicators and communicants, where this type
of communication is considered the most effective in
an effort to change one's attitudes, opinions or
behavior, because it has a dialogical nature in the
form of conversation. When communicating, the
communicator knows for sure whether the
communication is positive or negative, and
successful or not. This happens when the
communicator gives the communicant the opportunity
to ask as widely as possible. De Vito (1997) states
that communication quality has five dimensions,
namely openness, empathy, supportiveness,
positiveness, and equality. Openess indicates that
someone has a willingness to open his/her self so
that he/she can receive suggestions or information
from others. Emphaty can be seen from the activeness
in accompanying, being concentrated, and giving
physical contact with the person. Supportiveness
indicates the attitude in interpersonal relationship
that can motivate someone when it needed.
Positiveness is a person's tendency to be able to act
based on good judgment between communicators
and communicants. Meanwhile, equality indicates
that both communicators and communicans have
awereness that they are equally valuable and need
each other.
Baron, Byrne, & Branscombe (Sarwono &
Meinarno, 2011) state that self- esteem shows the
overall attitude that a person has, both positive and
negative. Lerner and Spanier (Ghufron & Risnawita,
2011) argue that Self-esteem is the level of
assessment given by individuals to themselves, both
in positive and negative assessments which are then
associated with the individual's self-concept.
This research needs to be done to determine the
correlation between the quality of parent-child
communication as a factor of interpersonal
interaction in the family and self- esteem as a
personal factor in answering the phenomenon of
smartphone addiction among generation Z teenagers,
especially high school students. Here is a theoretical
concept to explain this study.
ICPsyche 2021 - International Conference on Psychological Studies
322
Figure 1: Theoretical Concept.
Hypothesis
H
0
: there is no correlation between the quality of
parent-child communication and Self-esteem
with smartphone addiction on adolescents of
generation Z
H
a
: there is a correlation the quality of parent-
child communication and self- esteem with
smartphone addiction on adolescents of
generation Z
2 METHOD
This study uses a quantitative approach, in which
researches conduct a survey to get the data. The
sampling technique used was purposive sampling.
Researchers used a questionnaire to measure
each variable. The questionnaire consisted of open
and closed nature, which can be done directly by the
research subject. The questionnaire was also
accompanied by a consent form at the beginning. In
an open questionnaire, research subjects were asked
to fill in their personal data and answer essay
questions according to their circumstances. While in
a closed questionnaire (scale), the research subject
will be asked to choose one of the alternative
answers that have been provided in the form of
numbers to represent the situation that suits him/her.
The subjects in this study were 100 teenagers
(aged 15-18 years) who were students of class X, XI,
and XII SMA Trimurti Surabaya. At Trimurti High
School there are 24 classes, namely 8 classes for
class X, 4 classes for class XI IPA, 4 classes for class
XI IPS, 5 classes for class XII IPA, and 3 classes for
class XII IPS with an average number of students
reaching 40 in every class. Of the 24 classes, 6
classes will be taken, namely 2 classes in class X, 2
classes in class XI (IPA/IPS), and 2 classes in class
XII (IPA/IPS). For class X, 37 subjects were
obtained, class XI was 33 people, and class XII was
30 people. Of the 100 students, there were 52 boys
and 48 girls.
The quality of parent-child communication is
measured by a multidimensional scale based on the
operational definition of interpersonal
communication quality according to De Vito which
has five dimensions, such as openess, emphaty,
supportiveness, positiveness, and equality.
Researchers created a new scale with a total of 42
items, which included the five aspects of
communication quality according to De Vito in the
context of parent-child. The reliability of the test
results of the questionnaire with 38 respondents
showed the Cronbach's Alpha value of 0.915. The
assessment is based on 4 answer choices (STS =
strongly disagree, TS = not suitable, S = suitable, SS
= very suitable). The higher the total score, the higher
the quality of communication between parents and
children, and vice versa.
The scale used to measure Self-esteem is the
Revised Self Liking and Self Competence Scale
(SLSC-R) developed by Tafarodi and Swann (1995).
Based on Tafarodi & Swann (1995), Self-esteem in
this study is measured in 2 dimensions, namely self-
liking (our affective assessment of ourselves,
approval or disapproval of ourselves) and self-
competence (assessment of each individual self
experience as a result of the exercises that have been
done). SLSC-R contains 16 favorable and
unfavorable items with two dimensions, namely
self-liking and self-competence, and there are five
answer choices (1 = very unsuitable, up to 5 =
very suitable). The value of Cronbach's Alpha SLSC-
R reached 0.90 and after the research process in the
field, the reliability of the SLSC-R showed
Cronbach's Alpha value of 0.734 by removing eight
unfavorable items. Self-esteem scores based on
measurements with the SLSC-R through the total
score. The higher the total score, the higher the
Self-esteem, and vice versa. The smartphone
addiction scale was measured using the
Smartphone Addiction Scale Short Version (SAS-
SV) developed by Kwon et al (2013). SAS-SV is a
unidimensional scale and has 10 favorable items.
The value of Cronbach's Alpha SAS-SV is 0.911
and after the research process in the field, the
reliability of the SAS-SV shows the value of
Cronbach's Alpha 0.758. The assessment is based on
5 answer choices (1 = strongly disagree, up to 5 =
strongly agree). Smartphone addiction score based
on measurement with SAS-SV through total score.
Quality of Parent-child Communication, Self-esteem, and Smartphone Addiction on Generation Z Adolescent
323
The higher the total score, the higher the subject's
dependence on smartphones, and vice versa.
3 RESULT
3.1 Level of Smartphone Addiction
From the results of descriptive statistics, it was
found that the average smartphone addiction of Z
generation teenagers in SMA Trimurti Surabaya was
28.19 with a standard deviation (SD) of 6.8. The
average quality of parent-child communication is
127.65 with a standard deviation of 17.22. The
average Self-esteem is 29.37 with a standard
deviation of 4.67.
Table 1: Smartphone Addiction Category.
N
or
m
Category
N
Percent
x > 35.00 High 16 16%
21.38 x
35.00
Moderate 70 70%
x < 21.38 Low 14 14%
Based on the description table for the
smartphone addiction category above, it can be seen
that out of 100 research subjects, there are 16
students (16%) who have high smartphone
addiction, 70 students (70%) have moderate
smartphone addiction, and 14 students (14%) have
low smartphone addiction.
3.2 Level of Quality of Parent-child
Communication
Table 2: Quality of Parent-Child Communication
Category.
N
or
m
Category
N
Percent
x > 144.87 High 16 16%
110.43 x
144.87
Moderate 67 67%
x < 110.43 Low 17 17%
Based on the description table for the category of
parent-child communication quality above, it can be
seen that out of 100 research subjects, there were 16
students (16%) with good parent-child
communication quality, 67 students (67%) with
adequate parent-child communication quality, and 17
students (17%) with low quality of parent-child
communication.
3.3 Level of Self-esteem
Table 3: Self-esteem Category.
N
or
m
Category
N
Percent
x > 34.04 High 14 14%
24.70 x
34.04
Moderate 72 72%
x < 24.7 Low 14 14%
Based on the Self-esteem category description table
above, it can be seen that out of 100 research
subjects, there are similarities in the percentage
between students with high and low Self-esteem, as
many as 14 students (14%) have high and low Self-
esteem, and 72 other students (72%) have moderate
Self-esteem.
3.4 Correlation of Quality of
Parent-child Communication and
Self-esteem with Smartphone
Addiction
Based on the results of the normality assumption test
through Kolmogorov Smirnov where the
significance value is said to meet the normal data
requirements if (sig) > 0.05, the data distribution
from the smartphone addiction measurement is not
normal (sig 0.047 < 0.05), the data distribution from
the parent-child communication quality
measurement is normal (sig 0.095 > 0.05), and the
distribution of data from Self-esteem measurements
was not normal (sig 0.027 < 0.05). Therefore, the
researcher used non-parametric statistical analysis.
Table 4: Correlation Analysis.
Variable Sig. r (Spearman) Status
X
1
– Y 0.703 - 0.039 Not
significant
correlate
X
2
– Y 0.603 0.053 Not
significant
correlate
Muliple
correlation: X
1
,
X
2
Y
R = 0.051
No
multiple
correlation
Based on the table of non-parametric correlation
test results, the correlation between X1 (the quality
of parent-child communication) and Y (smartphone
addiction) shows that the correlation between X1
and Y is -0.039 with a significance level of 0.703 (p
ICPsyche 2021 - International Conference on Psychological Studies
324
> 0.05), which indicates that there is no correlation
There is a significant correlation between the quality
of parent-child communication with smartphone
addiction. The negative sign indicates that the
correlation between the quality of parent-child
communication is negative, that is, if the quality of
parent-child communication is high, the level of
smartphone addiction in children is low, and vice
versa.
The correlation between X2 and Y is 0.053
with a significance level of 0.603 (p > 0.05) which
means that H
0
is accepted and Ha is rejected, so it can
be said that there is no significant correlation
between Self-esteem and smartphone addiction. With
multiple correlation analysis, an R value of 0.051
was also obtained, which means that there is no
correlation between the quality of parent-child
communication and Self-esteem with smartphone
addiction on Generation Z teenagers of high school
students.
4 DISCUSSION
A non-significant correlation between the quality of
parent-child communication with smartphone
addiction, indicating other different findings. This
study reveals that social factors, such as interactions
in the family that involve the quality of parent-child
communication, are not always associated with
smartphone addiction.
Research on family functioning belonging to
Habibi, Danesh, and Mazandarani (2015) explains
that although family functioning is related to
internet addiction, which if family functioning is
poor then the level of internet addiction is high,
but the correlation coefficient of communication
aspects in family functioning is very small and not
significant. As discussed in the introduction section,
Chasanah and Kilis (2018) research which states the
weak influence seen from the relative contribution
(R
2
) of the communication aspect in the functioning
of families with gadget or smartphone addiction,
shows that other factors such as affective
responses, roles, and control behavior related to
various situations in the family also contributed more
to the decrease in smartphone addiction. This allows
parental supervision in the use of smartphones in
children can be quite related and have influence. On
the other hand, the non-significant correlation
between Self-esteem and smartphone addiction on
Generation Z high school students indicates that
this study supports the previous findings stated by
Pugh (2017). According to Pugh, low Self-esteem is
not always associated with high levels of
smartphone addiction. Through a review of the
previous literature, Pugh revealed the results of
research by Shaw and Gunt (2002) which
explained that high Self-esteem is actually
associated with a high level of smartphone
addiction. This is due to the loneliness factor, which
when someone experiences loneliness, there is a
tendency for low Self-esteem. With the use of
smartphones to access social media intensely, a
person feels they receive social support (perceived
social support), and according to research results,
the tendency of loneliness is reduced so that Self-
esteem increases along with the intensity of
smartphone use.
5 CONCLUSION
Based on the results of data analysis, it can be
concluded that there is no significant correlation
between the quality of parent-child communication
and Self-esteem with smartphone addiction on high
school students who are the adolescents of
generation Z. There are another factors which can be
stronger predictors for smartphone addiction on
adolescents, as mentioned that smartphone addiction
can be caused by four main factors, such as external
factors, situational factors, social factors, and
internal factors, while the quality of parent-child
communication is a part of social factors, and Self-
esteem is a part of internal factors.
For further researchers, through this research, it
is hoped that other attributes will be considered for
research with similar themes, for adolescents who
have a tendency to be dependent on smartphones so
that they can control the intensity of smartphone use
and sort out more positive activities in using
smartphones, then for parents to pay attention and
improve the quality of their communication.
positively with children so that parents can play a
more role in directing the use of smartphones wisely
in children.
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