Archive for February 15th, 2012

Outline


15 Feb
  •  Introduction/ Background
  1. Sleep debt is a growing problem that could be reduced by decreasing the amount of homework teachers assign to students, going to bed earlier, but most of all by turning off the electronics.
  2. “Sleep has become increasingly devalued in the 24-hour society’ (Martin 464).
  3. “sleep problems affect virtually every aspect of day-to-day living, including mood, mental alertness, work performance, and energy level” (Epstein 472).
  • Homework/School Start Time
  1. “It is also important for teens, like all people, to maintain a consistent sleep schedule across the entire week” (NSF 484).
  2. “The starting time of school puts limits on the time available for sleep” (Carskadon 492)
  • Going to bed earlier
  1. “Staying up late can cause chaos in your sleep patterns and your ability to be alert the next day…and beyond” (NSF 487).
  • Technology
  1. A Third of Life – “…Children’s bedrooms increasingly resemble places of entertainment rather than places of sleep” (Martin 464)
  2. “Watching television is the most popular activity (76%) for adolescents in the hour before bed time, while surfing the internet/instant-messaging (44%) and talking on the phone (40%) are close behind” (NSF 485).
  3. “Nearly all adolescents (97%) have at least one electronic item — such as a television, computer, telephone or music device — in their bedroom. On average, 6th-graders have more than two of these items in their bedroom, while 12th-graders have about four” (NSF 485).
  4. “Many teens have a technological playground in their bedrooms that offers a variety of ways to stay stimulated and delay sleep” (NSF 486).
  • Counterargument
  1. “It is not difficult to project that a large number of students see a later starting time as permission to stay up later at night studying, working, surfing the net, watching television and so forth” (Carskadon 495).
  2. While these solutions seem good, you can’t make students do these things, and they are not very realistic.
  • Conclusion
  • Works Cited

 

 

kplumme's blog

Another amazing bgsu blog


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