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johnnymk
12-14-2007, 11:12 AM
http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/A/ALL_NIGHTERS?SITE=NJASB&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT

ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) -- Students who rely on all-nighters to bring up their grades might want to sleep on that strategy: A new survey says those who never study all night have slightly higher GPAs than those who do.

A survey of 120 students at St. Lawrence University, a small liberal arts college in northern New York, found that students who have never pulled an all-nighter have average GPAs of 3.2, compared to 2.95 for those who have. The study, by assistant professor of psychology Pamela Thacher, is to be included in the January issue of Behavioral Sleep Medicine.

"It's not a big difference, but it's pretty striking," Thacher said. "I am primarily a sleep researcher and I know nobody thinks clearly at 4 in the morning. You think you do, but you can't."

A second study by Thacher, a clinical psychologist, had "extremely similar" results showing lower grades among the sleep skippers.

Many college students, of course, have inadequate or irregular sleep, for reasons ranging from excessive caffeine to poor time management.

Prav Chatani, a St. Lawrence sophomore who wasn't involved in either study, said the findings made sense. The neuroscience major has been pulling fewer all-nighters, but recently stayed up all night to prepare for an organic chemistry test and a neuroscience presentation, he said.

He had difficulty remembering some of the material he studied around 4 or 5 in the morning.

"A lot of students were under the impression all-nighters were a very useful tool for accomplishing work, that caffeine intake was very useful in meeting deadlines and stuff like that," said Chatani, who had a 3.4 GPA last semester and doesn't expect to do too badly this semester, either.

Dr. Howard Weiss, a physician at St. Peter's Sleep Center in Albany, said the study results make sense.

"Certainly that data is out there showing that short sleep duration absolutely interferes with concentration, interferes with performance on objective testing," he said.

Some night owls do get good grades, of course, which may be explained by circadian rhythms, Weiss said. Circadian rhythms can be tracked through body temperature and hormonal transmissions.

Some people have different 24-hour body clocks than others, and may do better depending on class and testing times, Weiss said.

Chloe LaFrance, a St. Lawrence junior from Elizabethtown majoring in psychology and English, said she's never studied all night. "If I get less than six hours of sleep I just do not function at all," she said.

LaFrance, who has about a 3.7 GPA, said she's never had a situation where she couldn't get all her work done.

"I'm in a crunch period right now," she said. "I just find I work better when I get sleep. I'm actually more productive."

In Thacher's first study, 65 students said they had pulled one or more all-nighters, and 45 said they hadn't done any. The survey was conducted in Psychology 101 classes, and included students in a variety of majors

molecularfire
12-14-2007, 03:42 PM
Of course those who don't pull all-nighters have higher GPAs. They likely actually studied for the test instead of waiting for the last minute. I don't pull all-nighters for s#@ts and giggles, I pull them because that night contributes to a significant percentage of the time I spent actually studying.

InfiniteNothing
12-14-2007, 03:46 PM
Starting in high school, when my day needed a few more hours in it, I used to go to bed on time and wake up really super early to finish an essay or a project. Nothing like a hard deadline (time to go to school) to get you writing. I think putting the sleep before the hard work made me more alert. Also, I kinda felt like because I got to sleep on it that while I was sleeping my creative subconcious got it's chance to put in some time on the project.

gear02
12-14-2007, 04:15 PM
For me I've found that if I had to decide between studying late at night for an exam and sleep, I pick sleep because I would rather rely on my brain in the morning than trying to cram at night. I found I was rarely learning much more during those late night cram sessions or all nighters.

Thesifer
12-14-2007, 05:11 PM
Of course those who don't pull all-nighters have higher GPAs. They likely actually studied for the test instead of waiting for the last minute. I don't pull all-nighters for s#@ts and giggles, I pull them because that night contributes to a significant percentage of the time I spent actually studying.
:stupid:

This is almost a :duh: to me.

If you are staying up all night to study, it's not usually because you are going to "keep studying" It's because you haven't studied at all, and don't know the material yet.

gear02
12-14-2007, 05:16 PM
:stupid:

This is almost a :duh: to me.

If you are staying up all night to study, it's not usually because you are going to "keep studying" It's because you haven't studied at all, and don't know the material yet.

Yeah now that I read it carefully, that's a terrible and frankly lazy study. There are so many factors that go into GPA and to say that not sleeping = lower GPA is silly. If you wanted to test this better, you test actual exam performance.

This is also shoddy reporting by a stupid reporter trying to make a name for themselves by exaggerating small piece of a bigger study.

Napoleon54
12-15-2007, 09:47 PM
I never did anything BUT an all-nighter before the exam or to write a paper. I found that if I paid attention in class and took good notes, I never really needed to study otherwise. Everybody's gotta find what works for them.