The most common media used by college freshmen majoring in communications is the Internet, with fewer than 3 percent regularly reading newspapers, according to the results of a Fo Guang University survey released yesterday.
In a poll of 224 freshmen in communications departments at six universities in northern Taiwan, 70.2 percent of respondents said they most often used the Internet to access media, while 25.1 percent cited television as their most common source of news.
Only 2.6 percent chose the paper versions of newspapers as their most common news source, and 1.6 percent cited the radio.
The most common way respondents accessed newspapers were through mobile applications, social media and the media outlet’s own portal, the survey found.
Among respondents who read newspapers, the three most popular sections were entertainment, world news and society, according to the survey.
Asked to choose the best newspaper, 29.8 percent of the students picked the United Daily News, 27.3 percent selected Apple Daily and 17.4 percent chose the Liberty Times, all Chinese-language newspapers.
Among TV news stations, 31.1 percent of the students said Public Television Service was the best, followed by TVBS-News (17.2 percent) and Next TV (10.2 percent).
In the radio station category, Hitoradio was ranked the best by the most number of respondents (20.5 percent), followed by International Community Radio Taipei (17.6 percent) and Radio Taiwan International (11 percent).
The results of the poll were released by Lan-Yang News, a newspaper published by the communications department of Fo Guang University. Aside from Fo Guang, the five other schools that participated in the survey were: Hsuan Chuang University, Tamkang University, Ming Chuan University, Fu Jen Catholic University and National Taiwan University of Arts.
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