New science on its corrosive, traumatizing effects.
As a single page. You could amend the post. A great read. I would have highlighted Rather than "corrosive, traumatizing effects" of high school, the article itself is about the period of neural plasticity we experience in adolescence and the impact that has on socialization. Boo hiss for the title writer (not you).It turns out that just before adolescence, the prefrontal cortex—the part of the brain that governs our ability to reason, grasp abstractions, control impulses, and self-reflect—undergoes a huge flurry of activity, giving young adults the intellectual capacity to form an identity, to develop the notion of a self. Any cultural stimuli we are exposed to during puberty can, therefore, make more of an impression, because we’re now perceiving them discerningly and metacognitively as things to sweep into our self-concepts or reject (I am the kind of person who likes the Allman Brothers). “During times when your identity is in transition,” says Steinberg, “it’s possible you store memories better than you do in times of stability.”
The study seems to indicate that, on average, we change much more in the 15-25 age range than the 25-35 or so age range (although I don't know if that's a known). Does reporting that, or having that as some type of consensus belief, affect the change that happen in those age ranges?
The basis of the article is the well-researched semi-recent discovery that adolescent brain development had been poorly understood up until the invention of MRI, basically. There's a lot of lit about it, but the basics are that teen brains are doing a lot more "rewiring" than at any time other than infancy. This is why teens display riskier behavior, why teens often do demonstrably "stupid" things that they know better than to do, why they have unpredictable impulse control, etc. There are very good reasons why teenagers are so "difficult" from a parental standpoint: emotionally and psychologically speaking, they're regressing in order to develop into mature adults.
Its also the basis for why many advocacy groups think that contact in high school sports should be drastically cut back. The developing brain is perhaps a lot more susceptible to injury, which may cause long term deficits, than anyone ever predicted. Youth hockey is moving in this direction, as they've moved the checking age from 11 to 13 (although recent efforts have been mounted to make 14 the cutoff), but youth football has basically been unresponsive. They will come around once the courts start letting athletes sue sports organizations for the irreparable damage they've suffered.
Hell to the yes. There's also some pretty compelling research that indicates pretty drastic circadian rhythm shift: teenagers naturally stay up later and wake up later (while also sleeping more). More than that, if you allow a teenager to go to bed at 2am and wake up at noon or 1 in the afternoon they're a lot less likely to be surly and disconnected. It upsets me a little that we're only now incorporating neuroscience into parenting.
No shit. I hated high school for a lot of reasons, but I'm sure I would have done better if it were in session from noon-7 instead of 7-2. What a bunch of bullshit that is. I spend half my day sleeping in class, and they tell me its my fault. Give me a break. I could learn more in two hours if fully awake than I could in 7 hours of half sleep.
I have to say that I experienced the opposite. Throughout all of my high school years, I woke at 5am but still went to bed at 11pm. This has led me to the point where I feel at my best with a minimum of sleep (sometimes as few as just 3 hours, though usually more like 5). For me, there's a pretty noticeable shift in my bell curve of how much sleep I get compared to how I feel. I seem to see most people feel terrible from 0 - 5 hours of sleep, then great between 6 - 9, then bad (or at least not normal) at 9+. However, I feel bad from 0 - 2, good to great from 3 - 7, then pretty weird from 7+. I don't know if that's normal, or if I'm simply not being thorough with my observations.
I guess I was wondering if telling people ages 15-25 that they will change a lot or telling people 25-35 that they are less likely to change magnifies the changes that occur - if there's a psychological component where, if you determine that you are likely or unlikely to change, that the likelihood is pushed (slightly, if at all) to the extremes.