Is Social Media Leading to Tired Students?
Teens spend more time in front of screens than they do sleeping.
According to a 2015 report by Common Sense Media, teens spend upwards of 9 hours a day consuming media on screens. And while the National Sleep Foundation recommends that teenagers get a 9 and 1/2 hours of sleep each night, the average American teenager sleeps around 7 hours each day.
A lack of proper sleep has been connected with reduced cognitive functions and lower academic performance. Teens may be tired because instead of sleeping soundly they are sleeping with their smartphones. Not only are they using their devices right before bed, which has been connected with increased difficulty in falling asleep, but a new study has found that “over a third of young people appear to be waking up during the night to send or check messages via social media.”
The practice is often referred to as vamping, as teens may act like a vampire with a heightened amount of activity in the middle of the night. Besides the lower amount of total sleep, waking up in the middle of the night disturbs the cyclical nature of sleep. The rapid-eye-movement stage of sleep, where the bulk of dreams occur, is often thought to be the most productive part of the sleep process.
In the recently published Sleepless in school? The social dimensions of young people’s bedtime rest and routines, the researchers examined whether the concern over social media use and teen sleep deprivation was overblown or justified. While the researchers determined that the majority of the young people they studied (12-15 years-old) received an adequate night’s rest, they found that “a significant proportion does go to school tired, with apparent negative consequences for their well-being.”
“For young people going through adolescence, there is a growing body of evidence to indicate that ‘inadequate’ amounts of sleep and irregular retiring and rising patterns are associated with lower academic performance.”
What makes teens tired for school? The researchers concluded that the routine of sleep and the level of social media engagement was a more important factor than the time of going to bed or the total amount of sleep. It was the disruption of the sleep rhythm that seemed to have the most profound effect.
“We find that increased sleep time is associated with improvements in classroom concentration as well as increased educational attainment,” state the researchers from the new study, Sleepwalking Through School: New Evidence on Sleep and Academic Performance. Utilizing data from the National Longitudinal Study of Adolescent Health, the researchers found a U-shape correlation with sleep and academic performance, with the optimal amount being 8.5 hours a night.
Why Do Teens Sleep With Their Smartphones?
The fear of missing out (FOMO) may be causing teens to truly miss out on something crucial to their mental well-being: sleep. And for overscheduled teens, late night social media use may also be about asserting control.
Speaking to the New York Times for a story about vamping, professor Alice Marwick stated that, “Social media is about having agency over your own life and vamping is one way to recapture that.” Marwick is an assistant professor at Fordham University, who focuses on the internet and society.
It remains to be seen how we adjust to teens often having poor sleep quality due to pre-sleep and middle of the night social media use. While there is a multitude of factors that impact sleep quality and academic performance, such as caffeine consumption and school’s early start time, being awoken at 3 AM with a social media notification is certainly not ideal for academic performance.
In the future, “It’s bedtime” may need to be replaced with “It’s time to unplug.”
“I think that a lot of the sleep problems that we have as a society are a consequence of our 24/7 culture that we have. Why does it matter? Well, the brain without sleep…you can’t pay attention, the judgement areas of the brain are impaired…the ability to learn is impaired.” -Dr Charles A. Czeisler, Baldino Professor of Sleep Medicine and director, Division of Sleep Medicine, Harvard Medical School
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