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Teens and Sleep Sleep
patterns change
during adolescence. Most teens tend to stay up later at night, whether
socializing or doing homework, and sleep later in the morning. Brown
University
psychology professor Mary Carskadon has been studying the effect of
early
morning schedules on teens since the early 1980's. Carskadon says that
this
change in sleep patterns is not a choice, but rather a biological need.
Older
teens get a nightly squirt of the hormone melatonin (which induces
sleepiness)
about an hour later than younger adolescents do. This not only causes
the teens
to stay up later, it affects their sleep cycle the following morning.
They're
often tired when they get up. How Much
Sleep Do
Teens Need? The
National Sleep Foundation reports that most adolescents --
between the ages of 10 and 18 -- need between 8.5 and 9.25 hours of
sleep each
night. The foundation offers the following pointers: · Enforce
a regular sleep schedule when she's young and keep
appropriate schedules as she grows older. · Talk
with your teen about his own sleep/awake schedule and level
of tiredness. Discuss how much time he spends in extracurricular
activities and
after-school jobs. Help him
make
adjustments to his commitments so he can get his sleep needs met and
find
himself awake and alive during the day. Sleep
Solutions Sleep
experts favor a
school day that begins at 9:30 or 10 for teens. And researchers at
Johns
Hopkins University have found that teens who start a bit later may get
better
grades. But is
this research
having any effect on school districts? In Minnesota, some school
districts are
experimenting with school starting times. Kyla Walhstrom, associate
director of
the Center for Applied Research in Educational Improvement at the
University of
Minnesota, has studied the logistics of a schedule shift. "Teachers are
saying, 'This is a remarkable change. The attention that is being paid
in my
first-hour class is so vast; I can't get over the difference that one
hour of
sleep makes.'" |
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