Digging Into Digital: Investigating the Self-perceived Social Media Competency of Oklahoma Extension Master Gardeners

Social media platforms exhibit the capacity to serve as a beneficial tool for Cooperative Extension Service (CES) outreach endeavors. However, Extension educators face barriers adopting these platforms, including time constraints and lack of training. This study investigated whether Oklahoma’s Exten...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brooklyn Evans, Audrey E.H. King, Lauren Lewis Cline, Justin Quetone Moss, Kenna Sandberg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Society for Horticultural Science (ASHS) 2025-01-01
Series:HortTechnology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.ashs.org/horttech/view/journals/horttech/35/2/article-p117.xml
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1825208834645295104
author Brooklyn Evans
Audrey E.H. King
Lauren Lewis Cline
Justin Quetone Moss
Kenna Sandberg
author_facet Brooklyn Evans
Audrey E.H. King
Lauren Lewis Cline
Justin Quetone Moss
Kenna Sandberg
author_sort Brooklyn Evans
collection DOAJ
description Social media platforms exhibit the capacity to serve as a beneficial tool for Cooperative Extension Service (CES) outreach endeavors. However, Extension educators face barriers adopting these platforms, including time constraints and lack of training. This study investigated whether Oklahoma’s Extension Master Gardeners (OK-EMGs) volunteers could support local CES social media efforts to combat horticultural misinformation by assessing their self-perceived social media competency. Overall, 219 OK-EMGs completed an online survey with 28 Likert-type scale questions representing the following four competency constructs: technical usability, content interpretation, content generation, and anticipatory reflection. Scores were relatively high across constructs. Statistical differences existed between digital natives and digital immigrants for technical usability only, indicating that generational technology exposure affects platform navigation abilities. No correlation occurred between competency and OK-EMG tenure, thus inferring skills come from external social media experience rather than training. Tailored programming by age and incorporating social media into curriculum could elevate competencies. The OK-EMGs demonstrate potential for assisting with local Extension online efforts of combatting horticultural misinformation and guiding community members to credible CES resources.
format Article
id doaj-art-1462a0387473434caf597ffd4ae379e7
institution Kabale University
issn 1943-7714
language English
publishDate 2025-01-01
publisher American Society for Horticultural Science (ASHS)
record_format Article
series HortTechnology
spelling doaj-art-1462a0387473434caf597ffd4ae379e72025-02-06T17:26:56ZengAmerican Society for Horticultural Science (ASHS)HortTechnology1943-77142025-01-01352https://doi.org/10.21273/HORTTECH05564-24Digging Into Digital: Investigating the Self-perceived Social Media Competency of Oklahoma Extension Master GardenersBrooklyn Evans0Audrey E.H. King1Lauren Lewis Cline2Justin Quetone Moss3Kenna Sandberg4LeFlore County Extension Center, 103 North Church Street, Poteau, OK 74953, USAOklahoma State University, Agricultural HallOklahoma State University, Agricultural HallOklahoma State University, Agricultural HallOklahoma State University, Agricultural HallSocial media platforms exhibit the capacity to serve as a beneficial tool for Cooperative Extension Service (CES) outreach endeavors. However, Extension educators face barriers adopting these platforms, including time constraints and lack of training. This study investigated whether Oklahoma’s Extension Master Gardeners (OK-EMGs) volunteers could support local CES social media efforts to combat horticultural misinformation by assessing their self-perceived social media competency. Overall, 219 OK-EMGs completed an online survey with 28 Likert-type scale questions representing the following four competency constructs: technical usability, content interpretation, content generation, and anticipatory reflection. Scores were relatively high across constructs. Statistical differences existed between digital natives and digital immigrants for technical usability only, indicating that generational technology exposure affects platform navigation abilities. No correlation occurred between competency and OK-EMG tenure, thus inferring skills come from external social media experience rather than training. Tailored programming by age and incorporating social media into curriculum could elevate competencies. The OK-EMGs demonstrate potential for assisting with local Extension online efforts of combatting horticultural misinformation and guiding community members to credible CES resources.https://journals.ashs.org/horttech/view/journals/horttech/35/2/article-p117.xmlextension master gardenersself-efficacysocial cognitive theorysocial media
spellingShingle Brooklyn Evans
Audrey E.H. King
Lauren Lewis Cline
Justin Quetone Moss
Kenna Sandberg
Digging Into Digital: Investigating the Self-perceived Social Media Competency of Oklahoma Extension Master Gardeners
HortTechnology
extension master gardeners
self-efficacy
social cognitive theory
social media
title Digging Into Digital: Investigating the Self-perceived Social Media Competency of Oklahoma Extension Master Gardeners
title_full Digging Into Digital: Investigating the Self-perceived Social Media Competency of Oklahoma Extension Master Gardeners
title_fullStr Digging Into Digital: Investigating the Self-perceived Social Media Competency of Oklahoma Extension Master Gardeners
title_full_unstemmed Digging Into Digital: Investigating the Self-perceived Social Media Competency of Oklahoma Extension Master Gardeners
title_short Digging Into Digital: Investigating the Self-perceived Social Media Competency of Oklahoma Extension Master Gardeners
title_sort digging into digital investigating the self perceived social media competency of oklahoma extension master gardeners
topic extension master gardeners
self-efficacy
social cognitive theory
social media
url https://journals.ashs.org/horttech/view/journals/horttech/35/2/article-p117.xml
work_keys_str_mv AT brooklynevans diggingintodigitalinvestigatingtheselfperceivedsocialmediacompetencyofoklahomaextensionmastergardeners
AT audreyehking diggingintodigitalinvestigatingtheselfperceivedsocialmediacompetencyofoklahomaextensionmastergardeners
AT laurenlewiscline diggingintodigitalinvestigatingtheselfperceivedsocialmediacompetencyofoklahomaextensionmastergardeners
AT justinquetonemoss diggingintodigitalinvestigatingtheselfperceivedsocialmediacompetencyofoklahomaextensionmastergardeners
AT kennasandberg diggingintodigitalinvestigatingtheselfperceivedsocialmediacompetencyofoklahomaextensionmastergardeners