BEYOND CYBER SLANG: NETSPEAK AND ACADEMIC WRITING PRACTICES IN GENERATION Z HIGHER EDUCATION

Authors

  • Nashra Mujeeb Department of English Linguistics, NCBA&E, Alhamra University, Bahawalpur, Pakistan. Author
  • Muhammad Arfan Lodhi Higher Education Department (Collegiate Wing), Punjab, Pakistan. Department of English Linguistics, NCBA&E, Alhamra University, Bahawalpur, Pakistan. Author
  • Shanza Akram Department of English Linguistics, NCBA&E, Alhamra University, Bahawalpur, Pakistan. Author
  • Aqib Ali Department of Computer Science, Concordia College, Bahawalpur, Pakistan. Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.63878/jalt2247

Keywords:

Netspeak; Academic writing; Generation Z; Register awareness; Code-switching; Higher education.

Abstract

This exploratory mixed-methods study investigates the use of netspeak and academic writing practices among Generation Z university students, focusing on patterns of use, contextual variation, and transfer across informal and academic settings. Data were collected from 250 undergraduates through surveys, elicited writing tasks, and semi-structured interviews. Reliability analyses indicated consistent measurement across survey scales (Cronbach’s α = 0.81–0.82). Descriptive analyses revealed strong contextual modulation of netspeak use, with abbreviations and emojis occurring frequently in peer communication (M = 12.84 and 8.57 per 100 words, respectively). However, they were nearly absent in formal academic writing (M = 0.77 and 0.26). Multiple regression analysis showed that greater platform exposure (B = 0.20, p < .001) and more positive attitudes toward netspeak (B = 0.27, p < .001) significantly predicted higher levels of netspeak transfer into academic writing. In contrast, genre awareness was associated with reduced transfer (B = –0.51, p < .001). Ordinal logistic regression further indicated that exposure, attitudes, and L2 English status increased the likelihood of perceiving netspeak as appropriate, while genre awareness significantly lowered appropriateness ratings. Social Sciences students evaluated netspeak as less appropriate than Humanities students, although no significant disciplinary differences emerged in actual transfer patterns. Inter-rater coding reliability for netspeak features in writing tasks was substantial (Cohen’s κ = 0.73). Overall, the findings suggest that netspeak functions as a context-sensitive register reflecting digital fluency rather than a threat to academic literacy, underscoring the importance of cultivating genre awareness and code-switching skills in Generation Z higher education.

References

Abbas, S. M., Begum, U., Ullah, Z., & Abdullah, S. (2025). Creative Writing in the Digital World:

Assessing the Impacts of Digital Media on the Creative Writing Skills of Undergraduate

Students. Review Journal of Social Psychology & Social Works, 3(1), 559-583.

Akabuike, G. I., & Onuh, I. C. (2025). English Spelling Variations in Social Media among Select

Students of English language in Nnamdi Azikiwe University. Ansu Journal of Language and

Literary Studies, 5(1).

Ahmad, N., Alias, F. A., Hamat, M., & Mohamed, S. A. (2024). Reliability analysis: application of

cronbach's alpha in research instruments. Pioneering the Future: Delving Into E‐Learning's

Landscape, 114-119.

Archakov, I., & Hansen, P. R. (2024). A canonical representation of block matrices with applications

to covariance and correlation matrices. Review of Economics and Statistics, 106(4), 1099-1113.

Blažević, M. R., & Žuvela Blažević, T. (2025). Insights into Algospeak and Sensitive Language on

TikTok. Zbornik radova Međimurskog veleučilišta u Čakovcu, 16(1), 40-53.

Chattamvelli, R. (2024). Pearson’s Correlation. In Correlation in Engineering and the Applied

Sciences: Applications in R (pp. 55-76). Cham: Springer Nature Switzerland.

Curtis, D. (2024). Welch’st test is more sensitive to real world violations of distributional assumptions

than student’st test but logistic regression is more robust than either. Statistical Papers, 65(6),

-3989.

Daquila, J. P. R. (2024). Generation Z linguistic behavior in the UAE: A threat to Emirati

Arabic. Generation Z Linguistic Behavior in the UAE: A Threat to Emirati Arabic.

DeJonckheere, M., Vaughn, L. M., James, T. G., & Schondelmeyer, A. C. (2024). Qualitative thematic

analysis in a mixed methods study: Guidelines and considerations for integration. Journal of Mixed

Methods Research, 18(3), 258-269.

Dires, A. A., Workie, D. L., & Teklie, A. K. (2025). Exploring factors influencing childhood

immunization status in East Africa using multilevel ordinal logistic regression analysis. Frontiers

in Public Health, 12, 1508303.

Ivasciuc, I. S., Sequeira, A. S., Brown, L., Ispas, A., & Peyré, O. (2025). Digital Natives on the Move:

Cross-Cultural Insights into Generation Z’s Travel Preferences. Sustainability, 17(14), 6601.

Intamart, K. (2025). Sociocultural Variables in Shaping Pragmatic Awareness Among Thai Learners of

French. The International Journal of Communication and Linguistic Studies, 23(3), 111.

Ingio, J. A., Nsang, A. S., & Iorliam, A. (2024). Optimizing Rice Production Forecasting Through

Integrating Multiple Linear Regression with Recursive Feature Elimination. Journal of Future

Artificial Intelligence and Technologies, 1(2), 96-108.

Ju, Y. J., Lee, M. L., Chen, J. C., Wang, Y. C., Chen, C. P., Tsai, H. E., ... & Hsieh, C. L. (2025). Intra

rater and inter-rater reliability of the Empathic Communication Coding System. British Journal of

Occupational Therapy, 88(7), 420-428.

Javed, H., Gill, A. A., Shahzada, A., & Naveed, M. (2025). Linguistics Hybrids and Cross-Cultural

Neologisms: A Multilingual Study of Gen z Expression in Visual Social Media (Instagram,

Facebook, And Twitter) Ecosystem. Dialogue Social Science Review (DSSR), 3(6), 688-716.

Khan, R., Qamar, M. T., Ansari, M. S., & Yasmeen, J. (2025). Enhancing or impairing? Exploring

Indian EFL learners’ academic writing narratives with ChatGPT. Cogent Education, 12(1),

Kencana, N. (2025). Semantics in Digital Communication: An Analysis of Text Message Usage in Class

Groups by Generation Z In Higher Education. La Ogi: English Language Journal, 11(1), 50-61.

Lu, M., & Hu, Z. (2025). Leveraging Multimodal Information for Web Front-End Development

Instruction: Analyzing Effects on Cognitive Behavior, Interaction, and Persistent

Learning. Information, 16(9), 734.

Limpot, M. (2024). Linguistic features of filipino netspeak in online conversations. Epra International

Journal of Multidisciplinary Research (Ijmr).

Lavender Forsyth, G. A. (2025). Language endangerment in Vanuatu: Bislama likely does pose a threat

in

the

world’s most language-diverse country. Humanities and Social Sciences

Communications, 12(1), 1-12.

Mujeeb, N., Ali, A., & Anam, S. (2025). Exploring Qualitative, Quantitative, and Mixed Methods: A

Comprehensive Review in Educational Research. UMT Education Review, 8(1), 24-60.

Mohsin, R., Malik, A. H., & Zahid, M. S. (2024). Netspeak in English language communication in

university academic settings. International Research Journal of Social Sciences and

Humanities, 3(2), 48-57.

Macario, R. R., & Alieto, E. O. (2024, May). Spelling During the Netspeak Era: An Attitudinal

Investigation toward English Spelling and Writing among Teacher Education Students. In 20th

International Conference of the Asia Association of Computer-Assisted Language Learning

(AsiaCALL 2023) (pp. 122-139). Atlantis Press.

Mujeeb, N., Arfan Lodhi, M., Ali, A. et al. Beyond red ink: AI feedback and ESL academic writing

development in higher education. Lang Test Asia 16, 24 (2026).

Nilnarong, S. (2024). Analysis of English Netspeak in Line Messages. Asian Interdisciplinary and

Sustainability Review, 13(2), 1-14.

Pocock, E. (2025). Investigating “Algospeak” on social media platforms: a semi-systematic meta

narrative literature review with Orange-based text-mining.

Sitorus, N., Nasution, K., Pujiono, P., & Rangkuti, R. (2024, October). Language Transformation:

Tracing the Word Formation of Netspeak in the Digital Age. In Proceeding International

Conference on Malay Identity (pp. 28-39).

Sultana, M. S. (2025). Enhancing ESL Academic Writing by Leveraging Social Media (Master's thesis,

Greensboro College).

Seelro, S. (2025). Exploring The Impact of Digital Slang on Undergraduate Esl Learner’s Academic

Writing at Territory Level in Hyderabad, SINDH. International Research Journal of Social

Sciences and Humanities, 4(2), 51-67.

Sadigzade, Z. (2025). Dialect Diversity and Social Change: New Approaches in

Sociolinguistics. Journal of Azerbaijan Language and Education Studies, 2(3), 91-107.

Veraja, K. (2025). Slang In the Digital Era: A Linguistic Analysis (Doctoral dissertation, University of

Split. Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences).

Yousif, A. S. A. (2025). Multilingualism in the Digital Age: Code-Switching and Translanguaging

Online. Theory and Practice in Language Studies, 15(4), 1217-1225.

Downloads

Published

2026-05-25