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Montgomery Blair High School's Online Student Newspaper
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Nov. 11, 2004

Catching zzz's in school

by Karima Tawfik, Page Editor
They trudge through Blair's glass double doors dragging their feet and with their backpacks slumped over a shoulder. Outside it's dark and the sky is just beginning to show signs of day. Their eyes are heavy and their movements slow as they walk to first period. They are Blazers¯exhausted and sleep-deprived.

On most school days, students stumble out of bed at the call of their alarms after a mere seven hours of sleep instead of the optimal 9 hours and 15 minutes, according to the National Sleep Foundation. They are boarding buses by 7:00 a.m. and in class by 7:30 a.m., drowsily dreaming of crawling back into their warm beds.

Sleep deprivation has become an overlooked and chronic problem that, according to Pat Britz, Program Director for the National Sleep Foundation, "affects every aspect of life," from sports to schoolwork. For this reason, Britz says, Montgomery County school starting times including Blair's starting time are just "too early" and too damaging to the health of teens.

Zzzzoning out

Most Blazers view sleep as a luxury instead of a necessity. According to an informal Silver Chips survey conducted on Oct. 24, 70 percent of Blazers say they receive seven hours or less of sleep on an average school night. Homework and sports are prioritized over sleep, and with whatever free time is available, high-schoolers like senior Lindsey Fowler-Marques perk up to catch their friends online rather than retire to catch Z's in the sack.

Staying up late on school nights leads to a lack of concentration, increased vulnerability to illness, mood swings and even depression, according to Brisk. The effects of sleep deprivation are clear to math teacher Paul Grossman, who says that there are always a few people that fall asleep every day in his class. "I see a lot of students come into first period and just put their heads down," he says.

Taking a nap during class sometimes seems unavoidable, says senior Samia Said. She admits that she occasionally sleeps through her entire English period.
Despite her drowsiness, Said believes that her late nights of homework are worth the grades on her report card.

Struggling to stay awake

However, the price for maintaining an impressive GPA isn't cutting down on sports or schoolwork for senior Zack Koerper. It's going to bed past midnight after his daily two-hour soccer practices and the completion of his physics, AP Chemistry and AP Calculus homework.

To keep himself from dozing off in class, Koerper chews between two and four Jolt "caffeine energy gum" pieces throughout the day. He keeps the stash of green packets of gum, which are each equivalent to drinking a half cup of coffee, in the first compartment of his backpack so that he can access them early in the morning and throughout the school day whenever he feels like he's going to fall asleep. The most he's ever taken is eight in a day.

However, the temporary relief of caffeine, as well as naps after school, is not a substitute for a good night's sleep, says Britz.

"The driving force"

In 1998, the MCPS Board of Education examined the problem of sleep deprivation in high schools and considered a pilot program to test the delay of the 7:25 a.m. starting time. The school board voted in favor of a resolution to investigate the possibility of a "split schedule" high school that would give students the option of going to school at either 9:00 a.m. or 7:45 a.m. This program was expected to cost $140,000 for every 7,000 students wishing to choose a late schedule. The pilot program never started because no high school volunteered to do so, according to MCPS spokesperson Kate Harrison.

Harrison says that "transportation is the driving force" behind the maintenance of the 7:25 a.m. school starting time. According to Harrison, MCPS circulates 12,000 buses per day to elementary, middle and high schools, making the county's transportation system the seventh largest in the country. In order to move back the starting time, MCPS would need to buy more buses, fuel and hire more drivers, she says. In addition, a later schedule would interfere with extra-curriculars and family responsibilities such as taking care of siblings.

The benefits of pushing back the start times may, however, be worth the hassles. The National Sleep Foundation reports that drowsiness and fatigue contribute to the 100,000 traffic deaths in the U.S. per year, half of which are caused by drivers ages 25 or under. The foundation recommends that schools start no earlier than 9:00 a.m., a stark contrast to MCPS' 7:25 a.m.

The argument still exists that students should simply go to bed earlier. But most teenagers are not lying when they say they aren't tired as they watch a reasonable bed time slip away. Britz cites the circadian shift in the body that occurs during adolescent years as the reason teens don't feel the need to go to bed until later at night.

Other schools around the country have found that benefits of delaying the school start times outweigh the costs. During the 1995-1996 school year, Minneapolis schools changed their start times from 7:25 a.m. to 8:30 a.m. The district found that since the change, schools have increased attendance and decreased high school dropout rates.

"No-sleeper"

According to Blitz, the board of education is not planning to reopen the school starting times issue any time soon. That leaves students like senior Andrew Helgeson fighting off sleep during his classes. During lunch, he outlines his plan for the night. By the time he goes home and catches up on his AP European History and AP Comparative Government homework, as well as his AP Physics notes, 7:25 a.m. will be soon approaching. He resolves, "Tonight might be a no-sleeper."

Discuss this Article

  • Bob on November 11, 2004
    Why do they have to spend so much on testing? Spend it on transportation and then we can sleep in.
  • Abby on November 11, 2004
    Great article! I think sleep deprivation is definitely a very important issue to high school students -- thanks for reporting on it! Now if only we could get more money to start schools a little latter...
  • Lena Zezulin (View Email) on November 11, 2004
    The starting time of MCPS is a scandal. We all know it is bad for teenagers, and the school system does it to save money and have the same buses take three loads of kids. I hate it. Our child often get much less than 7 hours of sleep, and we his parents are also equally sleep deprived as a result of the schedule. Our quality of life has suffered in every respect. I wonder, should we as parents stage a partial strike or boycott - send our children in to school at 9 a.m. for days at a time? Would they flunk all the students out?
  • christie on November 11, 2004
    zacks a senior but awesome article, karima! =)
  • jay on November 12, 2004
    great article, sleep deprivation is a big issue in schools, and people should start paying more attention to it
  • Anonymously Liberal on November 12, 2004
    You think you have it tough? Magnets don't have a problem with the starting time, they have problems with the bus times--I normally sleep from 11:00 PM to 5:50 AM. Bus leaves at 6:15. Get to school at 7:15-7:20. Not a good day.
  • Bill White on November 12, 2004
    Seven hours? I wish.
  • !! on November 12, 2004
    go all-nighters!!!
  • need later times on November 12, 2004
    wow I went through those symptoms exactly when i didnt get any sleep last year...
  • Bob-ette on November 12, 2004
    just a couple more years till college...and then i'll only choose classes that meet in the afternoon.

    perfect.
  • Leslie on November 14, 2004
    I don't understand- why would it cost more money to have the same buses and same drivers run the same schedule just an hour or two later for the same students? It's absolutely ridiculous that the board requires students to wake up so early- there is nothing to be gained by running this schedule (or is there?). Elementary school students don't start school until around nine while middle and high school students start an hour and a half earlier. Why not switch these times? Have elementary and middle school students start at 730- it's not like they have the work load that high school students do and their bed times are generally far earlier than that of a high school student. LSKE:HFhaehalhto4atlyly just let us sleep
  • Bob on November 14, 2004
    I agree with Leslie. They don't have mane extracuriculars and they're usually up early anyway. my younger brother is usually awake just after me anyway. I also agree with anonymously liberal. I'm in the magnet and play sports. I wake up at 5:30 AM and am not home the night before until around 7:00 PM. By the end of dinner it's around 7:45. Then homework. I'm extremely lucky if it's only 11:00 when I go to bed. That's 6:30 of sleep. Don't worry, only 4 more days.

    It really would be great if we did a boycott. Send us all to school at 9:00 with notes. That would be extremely funny to see what they'd do when all 3300 of us went to the doctors the same day.

    But if we started at 8:25 and ended at 3:15 for non-magnet-non-CAP kids and 4:00 for magnet and CAP that really wouldn't be so bad. An extra hour of sleep wouldn't be too bad. But would it really be so bad to just start at 9:00 and go to 3:30 like elementary kids? And I'm sure magnet kids will love this. The only reason we have to leave later is so the same buses can get middle school kids here on time. If middle school buses and high school buses were seperate we could go home the same time as regular kids. YAY!
  • 06tilee on November 14, 2004
    I think students would be much more cheerful and attentive if school started at 9:00 instead of 7:25. pftt it's too early to do anything.
  • Antichrist on November 14, 2004
    People, people, people.... think!!! If school starts 2 1/2 hours later, then it gets out at 4:40 (5:30 for magnet). All this means is that it pushes your night later because you start your work 2.5 hours later. Tack on 2 hours for a sport and you're getting home just in time for dinner. You're just trading sleeping before midnight for sleeping after midnight. The only people who would benefit from this are people who lack the willpower to go to bed on time, not people who are forced to by their workload. Wouldn't you rather sleep 11-6 than 1-8?
  • Snorer... on November 15, 2004
    zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
  • huh on November 15, 2004
    antichrist, school would only be starting an hour and a 1/2 later, unless you want to start at 10...
  • merlyn on November 15, 2004
    9 hours and 15 minutes?

    Pffffffft. That's a lot of sleep.
  • Brian (View Email) on November 16, 2004
    the reason we start school early is becuase if we started two hours later, football practice would end at 730 and most other after school activities would end after dark, making it unsafe and inconvenient for poeple who are not within walking distance or have their own consistent way of transportation
  • @ on November 16, 2004
    to Anonymously Liberal: We all have to get up early, don't act like because you're in the magnet you suffer so much more than us 'regular' kids. I hate the bus times and starting times too, and I'm a 'regular' kid. Besides, when you signed up to be in the magnet you knew you would have to get up earlier than the other kids. You chose this, so don't complain.
  • Bob on November 18, 2004
    But they could also cut down on the amount of time in school. Trim 10 minutes from all 1:30 classes and 5 from 45 minute classes and you've cut 35 minutes (40 for magnet/CAP). Cut 15 minutes off and it's 50/55. 1:15 would be plenty of time for classes. I went to a middle school that went 9:00-3:00 or 6 hours. Most middle schoolers start around 8 and get out at 2:50. We went :50 less each day. It was fine. We didn't miss anything. 1:15 minutes would be plenty of time for every other day classes and provide some much-needed sleep even if it's only 8:15, that's better than 7:25.
  • Ami Maaller (View Email) on May 1, 2006 at 9:02 AM
    i agree! We need more sleep!

    I stayed up until 2:30 am last night doing homework!
  • me on August 13, 2006 at 2:17 PM
    Sometimes I wonder if it would help to add another year of high school and spread things out a bit. After all, people are living longer. 4 hours of sleep a night for me simply won't do!
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