PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Working more than 20 hours a week in high school found harmful

2011-02-04
(Press-News.org) Many teens work part-time during the school year, and in the current economic climate, more youths may take jobs to help out with family finances. But caution is advised: Among high school students, working more than 20 hours a week during the school year can lead to academic and behavior problems.

That's the finding of a new study by researchers at the University of Washington, University of Virginia, and Temple University. It appears in the January/February issue of the journal, Child Development.

In a reanalysis of longitudinal data collected in the late 1980s, researchers examined the impact of getting a job or leaving work among middle-class teens in 10th and 11th grades. Drawing from the full sample of about 1,800 individuals, the researchers compared adolescents who got jobs to similar teens who didn't work, and adolescents who left jobs to similar teens who kept working.

Using advances in statistical methods, the researchers matched the teens on a long list of background and personality characteristics that are known to influence whether or not a young person chooses to work; using this technique allowed more certainty in estimating the effects of working on adolescents' development than in the original analysis of the data.

The researchers found that working for more than 20 hours a week was associated with declines in school engagement and how far adolescents were expected to go in school, and increases in problem behavior such as stealing, carrying a weapon, and using alcohol and illegal drugs. They also found that things didn't get better when teens who were working more than 20 hours a week cut back their hours or stopped working altogether. In contrast, working 20 hours or less a week had negligible academic, psychological, or behavioral effects.

"Working part-time during the school year has been a fixture of American adolescence for more than 30 years," notes Kathryn C. Monahan, a postdoctoral research scientist at the University of Washington, who led the study. "Today, a substantial proportion of American high school students hold part-time jobs during the school year, and a large number of them work more than 20 hours each week.

"Although working during high school is unlikely to turn law-abiding teenagers into felons or cause students to flunk out of school, the extent of the adverse effects we found is not trivial, and even a small decline in school engagement or increase in problem behavior may be of concern to many parents," she adds.

The bottom line, suggests Monahan: "Parents, educators, and policymakers should monitor and constrain the number of hours adolescents work while they are enrolled in high school."

INFORMATION: The study was supported, in part, by the U.S. Department of Education.


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Children's BMI found to rise the longer their mothers work

2011-02-04
Childhood obesity in the United States has more than tripled in the past three decades, and prior research has linked maternal employment to children's body mass index (BMI), a measure of their weight-for-height. A new study in the January/February issue of the journal Child Development has found that children's BMI rose the more years their mothers worked over their children's lifetimes. Researchers at American University, Cornell University, and the University of Chicago used longitudinal information from the Study of Early Child Care and Youth Development, which was ...

School-based child-parent center yields high economic benefits

2011-02-04
The Child-Parent Center (CPC) early education program is a large-scale, federally funded intervention providing services for disadvantaged 3- to 9-year-olds in Chicago. A new cost-benefit analysis of the program has found that benefits exceeded costs in a number of areas, including increased earnings and savings. The longitudinal analysis appears in the January/February issue of Child Development, the journal of the Society for Research in Child Development. It was done by researchers at the University of Minnesota, and the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. "Our ...

Child care quality key for children from disadvantaged homes

2011-02-04
Decades of research have demonstrated the importance of the resources in children's homes and the benefits of high-quality interactions with parents in supporting healthy development. High-quality child care plays a similar, albeit less powerful, role. Children who come from more difficult home environments and have lower-quality child care have more social and emotional problems, but high-quality child care may help make up for their home environments. Those are the findings of a new study by researchers at the University of Denver, Georgetown University, American University, ...

Report says economic development could change worldwide face of cancer

2011-02-04
ATLANTA, February 4, 2011—A new American Cancer Society report says cancers associated with lifestyles and behaviors related to economic development, including lung, breast, and colorectal cancers, will continue to rise in developing countries if preventive measures are not widely applied. The finding comes from the second edition of Global Cancer Facts & Figures and its academic publication, Global Cancer Statistics, published in CA: A Cancer Journal for Clinicians. Both publications are being released on World Cancer Day, Feb. 4, 2011. The latest edition of Global Cancer ...

Early childhood education program yields high economic returns, U of Minnesota researchers find

2011-02-04
For every $1 invested in a Chicago early childhood education program, nearly $11 is projected to return to society over the children's lifetimes -- equivalent to an 18 percent annual return on program investment, according to a study led by University of Minnesota professor of child development Arthur Reynolds in the College of Education and Human Development. For the analysis, Reynolds and other researchers evaluated the effectiveness of the Chicago Public Schools' federally funded Child Parent Centers (CPCs) established in 1967. Their work represents the first long-term ...

New induced stem cells may unmask cancer at earliest stage

2011-02-04
MADISON - By coaxing healthy and diseased human bone marrow to become embryonic-like stem cells, a team of Wisconsin scientists has laid the groundwork for observing the onset of the blood cancer leukemia in the laboratory dish. "This is the first successful reprogramming of blood cells obtained from a patient with leukemia," says University of Wisconsin-Madison stem cell researcher Igor Slukvin, who directed a study aimed at generating all-purpose stem cells from bone marrow and umbilical cord blood. "We were able to turn the diseased cells back into pluripotent stem ...

Prompt Proofing Blog Post: To Hyphenate or Not to Hyphenate?

2011-02-04
I would have retired to Costa Rica in luxury years ago if I had a dollar every time a teacher got this one wrong on a student's report card. Johnny is a well-behaved child. Correct. Johnny is a well behaved child. Wrong. Johnny is well behaved. Correct. Johnny is well-behaved. Wrong. As a general rule of thumb, hyphenating with the adverb well depends on its place in the sentence - does it come before or after the noun? If before, hyphenate, if after, don't! Similarly: It was a well-built house. He produced a well-written article. BUT The house ...

Compliance Cartoons - TechColumbus Innovation Awards Semifinalist

2011-02-04
Compliance Cartoons has been selected as a semifinalist for "Outstanding Startup Business" in a regional competition among technology-inspired companies. As a provider of fun, creative, 5-10 minute learning interactions, Compliance Cartoons is changing the way companies approach ethics and compliance learning. The TechColumbus Innovation Awards recognizes companies that have "imagined, inspired and ignited" technology and innovation in central Ohio. Award nominees are recognized for their outstanding achievements in technology leadership and innovation. From hundreds ...

SEO Company Launches - With a Twist

2011-02-04
Poacher Come gamekeeper SEO Company SEOTastic has just launched its new website http://www.seotastic.co.uk.... with a twist Manchester based SEO Company SEOTastic has just launched its brand new website. It's MD, Damian Qualter states" We are really excited about our new site - we have been working really hard over the last 3 months putting together the finishing touches to it and it's ready to launch! I'm sure every day we read about new sites being launched but we hope we are a little different to the norm" Damian Qualter already runs several successful websites and ...

Exacttrend Software announces the update of Web Log Explorer 4.5

2011-02-04
The Web Log Explorer is a powerful log analyzer generates reports of any kind and displays them. The system of filters provides the ability to carry out deep analysis of visitor activity. It gives you activity statistics, file access statistics, and information about referring pages, search engines, errors, visitor countries, referring sites , you will get complete information about search words and phrases and more. The flexible system of filters provides an ability to carry out deep analysis of the visitors' activity. For example you can get information about visitors ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Multisite review shows serious adverse events occur frequently in outpatient care

Study highlights need for improvement of patient safety in outpatient settings

Sylvester researchers develop a nanoparticle that can penetrate the blood-brain barrier

Caterbot? Robatapillar? It crawls with ease through loops and bends

Geologists, biologists unearth the atomic fingerprints of cancer

Purdue pharmacy researcher receives $2.4 million NIH grant to fight antimicrobial-resistant lung infections

The Clues for Cleaner Water

New $14.5 million center to help US Navy overcome emerging challenges

Now available from Penn Nursing: innovative, online psychedelic course

Greet receives funding for Abstraction in the Andes, 1950 - 1970

Mindfulness training enhances opioid addiction treatment

Using advanced genetic techniques, scientists create mice with traits of Tourette disorder

3D video conferencing tool lets remote user control the view

The Ottawa Hospital is expanding life-saving biotherapeutics research and manufacturing to its new campus thanks to $59 million grant

Early neurodevelopmental assessments for predicting long-term outcomes in infants at high risk of cerebral palsy

Snowfall and drought: $4.8 million field campaign will improve forecasts in western US, led by U-M

SwRI Workbench for Offline Robotics Development™ (SWORD™) launched at Automate 2024

Science doesn't understand how ice forms (video)

Study reveals APOE4 gene duplication as a new genetic form of Alzheimer's disease

Study highlights key predictors of adolescent substance use; special issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry focuses on substance use disorders

Racial and ethnic disparities in initiation of direct oral anticoagulants among Medicare beneficiaries

Behavioral interventions to improve breast cancer screening outreach

Venus has almost no water. A new study may reveal why

DDT pollutants found in deep sea fish off Los Angeles coast

Turbid waters keep the coast healthy

Microscopic heart vessels imaged in super-resolution for first time at Imperial

Clinical trial shows that cytisinicline can help people quit vaping

Groundbreaking microcapacitors could power chips of the future

Machine learning for maternal health: University of Oklahoma engineer receives NSF Career Award for preeclampsia study

Unraveling isopods' culinary secrets and why it matters for ecosystems

[Press-News.org] Working more than 20 hours a week in high school found harmful