Youth Stress
Youth have the easy life, right? Wrong. While it may seem that most youth just go to school, talk on the phone for hours, play video games, and watch TV, they actually have more responsibilities and stress then most imagine. Research from the Institute for Social Research at the University of Michigan found that preteens spend an average of eight hours more a week at school, two hours more on sports, three hours more on chores and fewer hours watching TV or relaxing than preteens did 16 years ago. They also found that out of 8,000 high school students and people in their early 20s, nearly two-thirds of the correspondents feel stressed out at least once a week. Many youth try to squeeze in schoolwork, friends, TV, fitness, clubs, and sleep all from the time they leave school until they have to get ready for school the next morning. As a result, stress is a major problem for youths. This is shown in the academics, home, and in their extracurricular activities. One of the major things causing youth stress is academics. The biggest source of this is homework. For example, the March 2, 2001 Issues and Controversies On File article, "Homework" says that students are overburdened by homework. Homework lev
" (67) To further illustrate, the same article states, "In 1981. com/cf_0/m0/m0BGH/3_18/72698951/print. Obviously, the increased amount of homework adds stress to youth. They are putting in countless hours preparing and practicing. Patel talks about how young athletes may experience some competitive stress and anxiety. For children aged nine to twelve, homework increased to three hours and 37 minutes weekly, from two hours and 49 minutes. Also, an article entitled, "Too Young To Freak," in the October 2001 issue of Seventeen magazine constructed a survey of 5,315 people on the most stressful things in a teenager's life. The article states, "The homework stressed children unduly, often making them sick. For instance, in a May 24, 2001 Environmental News Network article entitled, "Survey Finds Noisy Neighborhoods Harmful to Children's Health," it states, "The low but continuos noise of everyday local traffic can cause stress in children and raise blood pressure, heart rates and levels of stress hormones, reports a new study by a Cornell University environmental psychologist and his European co-authors. Forty-two percent said school, compared to the smaller 19 percent parents, 14 percent appearance, and 14 percent relationships.
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