Showing posts with label students. Show all posts
Showing posts with label students. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 December 2018

Mobile Communication Has Become A Part Of The Lives Of Students

Mobile Communication Has Become A Part Of The Lives Of Students.
Ever undergo a scarcely addicted to your cellphone? A new boning up suggests that college students who can't keep their hands off their mobile devices - "high-frequency cellphone users" - discharge higher levels of anxiety, less satisfaction with life and trim grades than peers who use their cellphones less frequently. If you're not college age, you're not off the hook. The researchers said the results may put to use to people of all ages who have grown accustomed to using cellphones regularly, age and night. "People need to make a conscious decision to unplug from the unwearying barrage of electronic media and pursue something else," said Jacob Barkley, a scan co-author and associate professor at Kent State University.

And "There could be a substantial anxiety benefit". But that's easier said than done especially centre of students who are accustomed to being in constant communication with their friends. "The pickle is that the device is always in your pocket". The researchers became interested in the question of anxiety and productivity when they were doing a study, published in July, which found that gloomy cellphone use was associated with lower levels of fitness.

Issues coordinate to anxiety seemed to be associated with those who used the mobile device the most. For this study, published online and in the upcoming February debouchment of Computers in Human Behavior, the researchers surveyed about 500 manly and female students at Kent State University. The study authors captured cellphone and texting use, and in use established questionnaires about anxiety and life satisfaction, or happiness.

Participants, who were equally distributed by year in college, allowed the investigators to access their decorous university records to earn their cumulative college grade point average (GPA). The students represented 82 novel fields of study. Questions examining cellphone use asked students to thinking the total amount of time they spent using their mobile phone each day, including calling, texting, using Facebook, checking email, sending photos, gaming, surfing the Internet, watching videos, and tapping all other uses driven by apps and software.

Time listening to music was excluded. On average, students reported spending 279 minutes - almost five hours - a daylight using their cellphones and sending 77 issue messages a day. The researchers said this is the ahead deliberate over to connector cellphone use with a validated measure of anxiety with a wide range of cellphone users. Within this representational of typical college students, as cellphone use increased, so did anxiety.

Saturday, 5 May 2018

The Wave Of Drunkenness On American College Campuses

The Wave Of Drunkenness On American College Campuses.
With alcohol-related deaths and injuries rising on US college campuses, college officials are disquieting various ways to petiole the tide of encumbered drinking. One effort that targeted off-campus boozing shows some promise, researchers say. A program at a classify of public universities in California epitomize the level of heavy drinking at private parties and other locations by 6 percent, researchers set forth in the December issue of the American Journal of Preventive Medicine. The so-called Safer California Universities meditate on included measures such as stricter enforcement of local nuisance ordinances, police-run induce operations, driving-under-the-influence checkpoints, and use of campus and local media to spread the gen about the crackdown.

It's one of the first studies of college drinking that focuses on the environment rather than on prevention aimed at individuals, the researchers said. "The end was to reduce the number of big parties, which are more likely to involve tedious drinking," said lead author Robert F Saltz, senior research scientist at the Prevention Research Center, Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation in Berkeley, Calif.

And "There's this lore about college drinking that nothing works, and that if you do take a shot to increase enforcement, students will just find some progress around it. But now we have direct evidence that these kinds of interventions can have a fairly significant impact".

Eight campuses of the University of California and six campuses in the California State University routine were involved in the study. Half the schools were randomly assigned to the Safer program, which took result the fall semesters of 2005 and 2006. Student surveys were completed by undergrads in four capitulate semesters (2003 through 2006), and researchers analyzed samples of 1000 to 2000 students per campus per year.

Sunday, 27 March 2016

The Prevalence Of Adolescent Violence In Schools

The Prevalence Of Adolescent Violence In Schools.
Almost one-fifth of high-school students accept they physically mistreated someone they were dating, and those same students were likely to have hurt other students and their siblings, a new study finds. The study provides new details about the links between various types of violence, said scan lead author Emily F Rothman, an secondary professor at the Boston University School of Public Health. "There's a huge overall coupling between perpetration of dating violence and the perpetration of other forms of youth violence. The majority of students who were being raving with their dating partners were generally violent. They weren't selecting their dating partners specifically for violence".

For the study, published in the December subject of the journal Pediatrics, the researchers surveyed 1,398 urban peak school students at 22 schools in Boston in 2008 and asked if they had physically mournful a girlfriend or boyfriend, sibling or peer within the previous month. The authors demarcate physical abuse as "pushing, shoving, slapping, hitting, punching, kicking, or choking". Playful belligerence was excluded.

More than forty-one percent said they'd physically hurt another kid on at least one affair the previous month; 31,2 percent reported that they'd physically misused their siblings, and nearly 19 percent said they'd abused their boyfriend, girlfriend, someone they were dating or someone they were unambiguously having sex with. Among those admitted to dating violence, 9,9 percent reported kicking, hitting, or choking a partner; 17,6 percent said they had shoved or slapped a partner, and 42,8 percent had cursed at or called him or her "fat," "ugly," "stupid" or a like insult.

Sunday, 6 December 2015

Parents Do Not Understand Children

Parents Do Not Understand Children.
That introductory warm greet from parents when college students return home for the holidays can turn frosty with unexpected tenseness and conflict, an expert warns. "Parents are often shocked when kids spend days sleeping and the nights out with friends, while college students who have grown hand-me-down to freedom and independence chafe at curfews and demands on their time," Luis Manzo, principal director of student wellness and assessment at St John's University in New York City, said in a view news release. The son or daughter they sent away just a semester ago may appear to have morphed.

And "Parents are often stunned by the differences wrought by a few snappish months at college - they think about their child's body is being inhabited by a stranger. But college is a time when students evolution to adulthood; and returning home for the holidays is a time when parents and their college kids have need of to renegotiate rules so both parties feel comfortable".