±«Óătvâs efforts to educate caffeine-hungry students about the pitfalls of pulling all-nighters and the need for more shuteye were featured this week in a Times Higher Education (UK) article.
The British magazine highlighted last yearâs âCome to Bedâ event, which was part of a sleep awareness program sponsored by the universityâs .
In April, about 250 students, many of them wearing pajamas, were invited to nap in the Hall of Presidents while listening to sleep-inducing sounds. As the article noted, they were also treated to a bedtime story read by Charlotte Johnson, vice president and dean of the college.
âMaybe we got one or two people to think, âI can do this or I can adjust that,'â Jane Jones, coordinator of alcohol and drug education who helped organize the event, told the newspaper.
As for college studentsâ caffeine cravings, Jones said consuming excessive amounts only adds to their sleep-deprivation problems.
In the article, she went on to describe what she calls âtwo groups of sleep offenders:â overachievers who have never been taught balance and those who have always achieved good grades without working particularly hard.
âThen they come to college and it sneaks up on them that that paper is due. So theyâll start doing all-nighters. What theyâre learning is how to pass. You donât have any mastery of the topic.â
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