Posted on: March 5, 2019
Falling leaves. Cooler temps. Mid-semester exams. Autumn is finally upon us.
As your kids truly settle into the school year, their minds may be pulled in several directions. There are now bona fide assignments and deadlines to contend with, as well as the specter of fall standardized tests.
Yet, some students persist with their late night hours even as their mornings get earlier — a pattern which leads to insufficient sleep that affects their learning, their mood, and their health.
One of the principal roles of sleep is to facilitate the consolidation of memory. Don’t want to learn something and then lose it? Sleep well. Nearly a century of scientific findings “characterize sleep as a brain state optimizing memory consolidation.” Without adequate sleep, what is learned during the day does not get encoded well into long-term memory.
A lack of sleep is often behind the phenomenon of students cramming or holding onto information just long enough for the next day’s quiz but failing to apply the information to tests and exams that are more cumulative. Moreover, rest is the basis of all activity. Without adequate rest, we lack the energy and focus to do our best work. Consider the craze of Whoop, which one-ups Fitbit by tracking sleep to configure the most effective workouts for professional and college athletes, members of the military, and Olympians.
Had Disney better understood brain science when it was crafting Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Grumpy and Sleepy might have been combined as one character. One of the principal cognitive functions impaired by sleep deprivation is emotional control. When tired, people are both more irritable and more easily stressed.
The amygdala, the part of the brain that, among other tasks, detects threats, is about 60% more reactive when people are tired. A weary mind sees threat everywhere, which can lead us to feel that our best friend, who is upset, is upset with us, that our stern teacher is picking on us, that our parents, who asked how our day went, are inquisitors rather than inquisitive.
Lastly, about that zombie apocalypse. Many parents note that their students “just cannot get themselves out of bed in the morning,” when the real issue is getting to bed in the evening. When kids are stuck in summer mode and fail to quickly adjust to SST (School Standard Time), a sleep debt begins to accumulate.
Fast forward a couple of weeks when students are now fully tired, watch for the first burst of cool autumn weather (because viruses LOVE cool, dry weather), and wait for the outbreak: sick, sniffly, brain-fogged teens shuffling through their days. Zombies may be cool on TV, but they’re rarely high-performance individuals.
What to do: PLAN for sleep
- The typical adolescent needs about nine hours of sleep a night. A little math will show them how to plan to get sixty-three hours in a week. Sit down with your kids, schedules in hand, and find those hours. What strategies will get them to sixty-three?
- Set deadlines. If school means a wake-up time of 6:30am, then logic (and basic math) suggests a bedtime of 9:30-10:30pm. PLAN for that. People are motivated by deadlines. Don’t just go to bed after everything else is done. Plan a time for bed and arrange your evening so that everything gets done by that time.
- Aim to keep a weekend routine similar to school hours. It’s fine to sleep later on the weekends, but ideally not four or more hours later, lest you “jetlag” yourself every weekend.
- Charge cellphones in the kitchen, not your bedroom. Most people are so addicted to their smartphones that they cannot resist checking them, whether that means watching one more YouTube video or responding to any text anybody might send you. To resist the temptations created by the ability to access the whole known universe through your phone, remove it from your environment: that way, you only need to resist it once. Put your iPhone to bed so that you can unplug at the same time.
Planning for sleep means planning for a good school year. Plan on it being a good one for you!