Latest studies show that teens just aren’t getting enough
sleep and this has far-reaching consequences. When teens don’t get enough
downtime, they suffer from physical ailments, poor academic performance, and
mental health and behavioral issues. We all know that young children need sleep
and routines and so we have bedtimes. But, as children get older, we tend to
forget that their brains and bodies are still growing and that they need more
sleep than adults.
Studies show that teenagers need 9-10 hours of sleep.
Without proper sleep, memory and the ability to concentrate as well as higher
cognitive functioning is severely affected. This means that when your teen
pulls an all-nighter to study for exams, they are setting themselves up for a
poor performance on exam day.
A survey by the National Sleep Foundation found that 60% of
high school students suffered from extreme daytime fatigue which caused them to
regularly fall asleep in class. They attributed this to the average of 6.5
hours of sleep that the students we getting.
Dr. Avi Sadeh, a lecturer at the University of Tel Aviv,
conducted a study to find out just how much sleep deprivation affected academic
performance; "A loss of one hour of sleep is equivalent to [the loss of]
two years of cognitive maturation and development.” What this means practically
is that a sleepy eighth grader will perform academically closer to a sixth
grade level.
Lack of sleep also reduces the efficacy of immune systems
and that leaves students vulnerable to all the illnesses they are exposed to at
school. Missed school days also contribute to poor academic performances.
One of the reasons teens tend to stay up late is biological.
Sleep researchers Mary Carskadon, at Brown University, and Bill Dement at
Stanford found that at certain times of our life, our biological clocks keep us
up and make us resistant to sleep. This phenomenon is called ‘phase delay’ and
occurs before and during puberty. That means that your poor teen doesn’t feel
in the least bit sleepy despite the fact that they really need their rest.
One way to encourage students to sleep is by taking a
melatonin supplement just before bed, by encouraging exercise and healthy
eating and by getting your teens to avoid computers, games and academic tasks at
least two hours before bedtime.
A Harvard study discovered that the brain continues to learn
even after you fall asleep. This is when it consolidates information and works
through processes or steps you have learned the day before. Have you ever found
that you were struggling with something, but then after a nap or a good night’s
sleep, you suddenly got the hang of it? That’s because while you are sleeping,
your brain was working on the problem without the noise and distractions of the
day.
If you want to help your student to excel
academically and be healthier and happier, then more sleep is definitely the
answer. Move your Zzzzz to A’s this semester by making sure your students are
getting all the sleep they need.
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