Demystifying the Hypodermic Needle Theory: EFL Students’ Journey from Passive to Critical Social Media Consumption
Keywords:
Critical Media Literacy, Digital Media, EFL students, Hypodermic Needle Theory, Social Media UseAbstract
This paper is a critical analysis of the relevance of Hypodermic Needle Theory when applied to digital media usage in EFL students with a view of criticizing the idea of media audiences as passive receivers of media message. Utilizing both the quantitative and qualitative data gathered among students at the Moulay Ismail University, the research examines the process through which EFL student interacts and assesses content in diverse social media sites. The results indicate a very good media activity with the majority of the participants spending more than three hours a day on YouTube, WhatsApp, and Facebook. Although the main usage purpose was established as entertainment, the statistics show that a considerable part of the EFL students are rather critically aware. The respondents often evaluate sources in terms of their credibility, watch out to not be influenced emotionally, compare the data on different platforms, and share their use of social media as educational tools to improve their lives. Such actions represent active thinking and involvement in the media, and they disprove completely the passivity of audiences based on the assumptions of the Hypodermic Needle Theory. The mixed-method approach of the study provides a detailed snapshot of the digital literacy of students and their capability of using the content of the social media sites in a skeptical and thoughtful manner. The study will lead to a more proper perception of the media power in the digital era due to the illumination of the role played by students in constructing their experiences online. The particular relevance of the study is due to its attempt of amalgamating theoretical assumptions with those that happen in the reality, still, with limitations related to the small scale of the studied university as well as the self-reported nature of the setting. However, the results are of great significance to media literacy education and modern communication theory.
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Published on: 12-09-2025
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