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Mobile bullying : investigating the non-technical factors that influence forensic readiness in township schools in South Africa

The increasing use of mobile devices by high school learners has resulted in increased networking activities for learners who take advantage of opportunities presented by mobile technologies. Mobile technology continues to play a key role in facilitating online interactions amongst South African you...

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Main Author: Nembandona, Phillimon
Other Authors: Kyobe, Michael
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Information Systems 2016
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access_status_str Open Access
author Nembandona, Phillimon
author2 Kyobe, Michael
author_browse Kyobe, Michael
Nembandona, Phillimon
author_facet Kyobe, Michael
Nembandona, Phillimon
author_sort Nembandona, Phillimon
collection Thesis
description The increasing use of mobile devices by high school learners has resulted in increased networking activities for learners who take advantage of opportunities presented by mobile technologies. Mobile technology continues to play a key role in facilitating online interactions amongst South African youth, and some learners use mobile technology to enhance their learning capabilities. However, such electronic operations have also presented new risks particularly in the developing countries where online bullying is on the rise and investigations of such incidents or threats are expensive. Mobile bullying and lack of discipline of bullies, for instance, are major concerns in the society at large. To control these incidents, learners and teachers need to know what to do when incidents arise. The process of digital forensic investigation is typically left for those specialising in the field of digital forensics. Those responsible for learner's safety in schools are often faced with situations where they have to perform basic investigations or preserve evidence for incident escalation to the specialists. However, schools often do not prepare themselves well enough for the challenges relating to mobile bullying. They find themselves not knowing where to start or how to preserve evidence. Digital forensic investigations are even more challenging in school settings because of the dynamic nature of these environments. While studies have been conducted in the developed countries, little is still known about how schools in the developing world, for instance South Africa, may handle mobile bullying. Very little is known about how schools in the developing countries may maximise their potential to use digital evidence while minimising the impact resulting from the incident. There is limited guidance on how to be digital forensic ready in schools where teachers, learners, principals, and other role players are not trained well enough to deal with mobile bullying. The objective of this study was to provide insight into factors that enhance the non-technical forensic readiness program in township schools and the ability of teachers to investigate mobile bullying incidents. The study aimed at employing concepts of forensic readiness to ignite schools' ability to prepare for response to mobile bullying incidents and create a digital forensic ready learning environment. The study was conducted in South Africa, Limpopo and North West provinces. Five schools agreed to participate in this study; eighty-two valid responses were obtained from teachers. The study followed mixed methods approach to the theory.
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language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:27.383Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2016
publishDateRange 2016
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/20706 Mobile bullying : investigating the non-technical factors that influence forensic readiness in township schools in South Africa Nembandona, Phillimon Kyobe, Michael Information Systems cyberbullying The increasing use of mobile devices by high school learners has resulted in increased networking activities for learners who take advantage of opportunities presented by mobile technologies. Mobile technology continues to play a key role in facilitating online interactions amongst South African youth, and some learners use mobile technology to enhance their learning capabilities. However, such electronic operations have also presented new risks particularly in the developing countries where online bullying is on the rise and investigations of such incidents or threats are expensive. Mobile bullying and lack of discipline of bullies, for instance, are major concerns in the society at large. To control these incidents, learners and teachers need to know what to do when incidents arise. The process of digital forensic investigation is typically left for those specialising in the field of digital forensics. Those responsible for learner's safety in schools are often faced with situations where they have to perform basic investigations or preserve evidence for incident escalation to the specialists. However, schools often do not prepare themselves well enough for the challenges relating to mobile bullying. They find themselves not knowing where to start or how to preserve evidence. Digital forensic investigations are even more challenging in school settings because of the dynamic nature of these environments. While studies have been conducted in the developed countries, little is still known about how schools in the developing world, for instance South Africa, may handle mobile bullying. Very little is known about how schools in the developing countries may maximise their potential to use digital evidence while minimising the impact resulting from the incident. There is limited guidance on how to be digital forensic ready in schools where teachers, learners, principals, and other role players are not trained well enough to deal with mobile bullying. The objective of this study was to provide insight into factors that enhance the non-technical forensic readiness program in township schools and the ability of teachers to investigate mobile bullying incidents. The study aimed at employing concepts of forensic readiness to ignite schools' ability to prepare for response to mobile bullying incidents and create a digital forensic ready learning environment. The study was conducted in South Africa, Limpopo and North West provinces. Five schools agreed to participate in this study; eighty-two valid responses were obtained from teachers. The study followed mixed methods approach to the theory. 2016-07-25T11:31:55Z 2016-07-25T11:31:55Z 2016 Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20706 eng application/pdf Department of Information Systems Faculty of Commerce University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Information Systems
cyberbullying
Nembandona, Phillimon
Mobile bullying : investigating the non-technical factors that influence forensic readiness in township schools in South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Mobile bullying : investigating the non-technical factors that influence forensic readiness in township schools in South Africa
title_full Mobile bullying : investigating the non-technical factors that influence forensic readiness in township schools in South Africa
title_fullStr Mobile bullying : investigating the non-technical factors that influence forensic readiness in township schools in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Mobile bullying : investigating the non-technical factors that influence forensic readiness in township schools in South Africa
title_short Mobile bullying : investigating the non-technical factors that influence forensic readiness in township schools in South Africa
title_sort mobile bullying investigating the non technical factors that influence forensic readiness in township schools in south africa
topic Information Systems
cyberbullying
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/20706
work_keys_str_mv AT nembandonaphillimon mobilebullyinginvestigatingthenontechnicalfactorsthatinfluenceforensicreadinessintownshipschoolsinsouthafrica