Friday, June 12, 2026

More steps linked to healthier rest for college students

 

 – University students who aren’t always enthused about walking across campus for class can take heart in new research that suggests lots of daily steps translates to improved mental health and better sleep.

The study by scientists in the Oregon State University College of Liberal Arts was published in Behavioral Sleep Medicine. Their ongoing research also led to findings, published in Chronobiology International, that show negative mental health outcomes are more likely among college students who stay up late and sleep in late.

Each study involved more than 200 students from two different universities.

According to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, sleep problems are a common and damaging presence in the college student population. More than one-quarter of students, for example, experience insomnia.

Quality restorative sleep helps underpin cognitive function, mood regulation, metabolism and many other aspects of well-being, said OSU’s Jessica Dietch, assistant professor of psychological science.

“Poor sleep is detrimental to the health of college students,” said Dietch, a licensed clinical psychologist who is board certified in behavioral sleep medicine. “It has been consistently associated with increased stress and anxiety, as well as decreased academic performance.”

In the step-count project, doctoral student John Richmond Sy sought to test whether the 10,000-steps recommendation had a connection with quality sleep.

“In essence, we found that more steps are associated with sleeping earlier and sleeping better,” said Sy, now a postdoctoral research associate at the University of Arizona. “More steps, on average, resulted in earlier sleep timing, enhanced sleep quality and better mental health.”

The study did not, however, reveal a minimum step-count threshold for improved sleep and mental health. The scientists also didn’t find any association between step count and other sleep parameters such as total sleep time and sleep efficiency.

“Also, in future research we’d like to account for sedentariness, walking location and walking intensity,” he said.

In the Chronobiology International paper, Sy, Dietch and collaborators at OSU and the University of Arizona looked at sleep midpoint – basically, halfway between the time you go to bed and the time you get up. If your average midpoint is 1 a.m., you’re likely a morning lark; if it’s 5 a.m., you’re probably a night owl.

“When we think about sleep, we often think about duration and quality and overlook other features of sleep like timing and regularity,” Sy said. “I was interested in whether sleep timing and variability were associated with mental health, which is particularly relevant for young adults who have the tendency to stay up late.”

On average, Sy said, a late sleep midpoint was shown to be associated with worse mental health outcomes in general, while irregularity of sleep was only associated with depression.\

In addition to trying for a consistent sleep and wake time (even on weekends), Sy offers the following tips for people of all ages:

  • Get bright light exposure in the morning. “It helps align your circadian rhythm to the 24-hour day,” he said. “It helps wake you up in the morning and helps you fall asleep earlier in the evening and improve sleep quality.” 
  • Be active, which can improve both your sleep and mental health. “You might even try being active while getting your bright light exposure in the morning,” Sy said.
  • Avoid alcohol, cannabis, nicotine, caffeine and heavy meals close to bedtime; try to keep that time relaxing.
  • Keep your bedroom cool, dark and quiet.
  • Avoid activities unrelated to sleep or sex in your bed. “When we repeat a behavior at a certain location, we start to associate that place with that behavior and how that behavior makes us think and feel,” he said. “If we do work or homework or use our phones to doomscroll while in bed, we start to associate the bed with alertness or anxiety instead of sleepiness.”
  • Don't rely solely on your Fitbit or Apple watch’s evaluation of your sleep. “Wearables are useful to understand trends, but they are not infallible,” Sy said. “Remember, the wrist is not the brain.”

Moderate screen time may speed recovery in youth with concussion

 Researchers at Nationwide Children’s Hospital have found that moderate screen time might be better for concussion recovery than no screen time at all. In a study published today in British Journal of Sports Medicine, researchers found that about 141 minutes of screen time each day for the first three days following concussion was associated with quicker recovery.

“These findings support that moderate screen time – not too little or too much – may support concussion recovery,” said lead author Jingzhen Ginger Yang, PhD, MPH, principal investigator in the Center for Injury Research and Policy of the Abigail Wexner Research Institute at Nationwide Children’s. “A median of 141 minutes of screen time each day was associated with a 35% faster recovery, compared to 260 minutes of screen time each day. Youth who use screens for more than four hours per day or less than two hours per day may be at risk for slower concussion symptom resolution.”

This new study, conducted by experts in Nationwide Children’s Center for Injury Research and Policy and division of Sports Medicine evaluated screen time and type in the first week after a concussion and explored the associations between screen time (duration and type) and concussion recovery in youth.

While some research on pediatric concussion has relied on self-reported screen time, this study used a wearable device to objectively measure out-of-school screen time, measured in minutes per day. Screen time use was classified as smartphone, TV, computer/tablet, or gaming during the first week post-injury among youth aged 11-17 years with a physician-diagnosed concussion.

The type of screen time mattered, too. Around two hours per day of smartphone and TV use were associated with quicker recovery, while computer/tablet and gaming were not significantly related to faster symptom resolution. “This study showed that youth with concussion may benefit from some smartphone or TV use, rather than avoiding screen time completely or overusing screens in the days following a concussion,” said Thomas Pommering, DO, chief of sports medicine at Nationwide Children's and co-author of the study. “While clinical trials are needed to keep moving forward, this study shows a potential development in concussion treatment practices, contrary to previous guidance that recommended total avoidance of screens.”

This study has several important clinical implications:

  • Moderate screen time, neither too much or too little, during the first week after concussion may help accelerate recovery.
  • Pediatricians may consider recommending a balanced level of screen time among youth immediately after concussion.
  • Different types of screen activity may also affect recovery differently. Youth with concussion may benefit from monitoring both quantity and type screen use after injury, potentially with support of wearable technology, to aid in recovery.
  • Clinical trials are necessary to determine the optimal screen time and specific types of screen activities that may support concussion recovery among youth.

Families should collaborate with their child’s care team to develop an individualized care plan that is tailored to injury severity, symptom progressing and recovery milestones, with adjustments made throughout recovery.

Tuesday, June 9, 2026

More outdoor play during preschool years linked to better mental health later in childhood

 

Children who spend more time playing outdoors between the ages of two and four may be less likely to develop emotional and behavioural difficulties later in childhood.

That’s according to new research led by the University of Exeter, published in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry. Previous studies have shown a link between outdoor play and children’s mental health, but this is the first study to explore how outdoor play in the early years relates to children’s mental health over time.

Most children have low levels of mental health difficulties that stay low across childhood, but some increasingly experience difficulties with their mental health and others have difficulties from an early age. These new findings suggest the more often children play outdoors as preschoolers, the more likely it is that their mental health problems will be low through to middle childhood (aged eight).

Researchers analysed data from 4,151 children from the Growing Up in Scotland cohort dataset and looked at symptoms of mental health when children were aged four, five, six, and eight years old. This included externalising symptoms - which are problem behaviours such as aggression, impulsivity and hyperactivity - and internalising symptoms such as anxiety and depression. 

The research found those who played outdoors more frequently at ages two, three and four were more likely to remain in a low-symptom, good mental health group through to middle childhood. Specifically, the results showed that for each additional day that a child plays outdoors in a typical week during the preschool years, the odds of that child having a healthy profile of mental health symptoms through to age eight increases by between six and 14 per cent.

Professor Helen Dodd from the University of Exeter led the study and said: “Our findings suggest that providing young children with more opportunities to play outside could be a simple, low-cost way to support better mental health and should be considered within public health, education and planning policies. This includes providing adequate funding for the provision and maintenance of playgrounds and protection for the range of spaces that children and families use for play, which include informal spaces close to home, parks and other green spaces. These public spaces are especially important for people without access to a garden.”

To isolate the effect of outdoor play, the researchers controlled for a range of other related variables including child sex, ethnicity, highest education level within household, number of physical conditions that the child experiences, working status of parents, and whether the family had access to a park within ten minutes of home and/or access to a garden.

Marguerite Hunter Blair OBE, chair of the UK Children’s Play Policy Forum, welcomed the study and said: “These findings clearly demonstrate the importance of play-based early interventions that can have a long-lasting positive impact on preschool children’s mental health. This evidence shows that our young children will benefit significantly from more play opportunities and better spaces to play. To support this, governments and local authorities must build outdoor play into key policies and work with communities to create and improve these essential play spaces."

The paper titled ‘Early Outdoor Play Predicts Trajectories of Child Mental Health in a Population-Based Cohort’ is published in the Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry.

The study, in collaboration with the University of Glasgow, University College London, and Complutense University of Madrid, Spain, was supported by funding from UK Research and Innovation (UKRI) and National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR).

ENDS

Monday, June 8, 2026

The Effect of Height on Adolescents' Body Image Perceptions

 This paper estimates the causal effect of height on adolescents’ body image, encompassing self-perceptions of weight, the accuracy of those perceptions, and weight-management aspirations. Using data from the National Longitudinal Survey of Youth 1997 (NLSY97), the authors isolate the effects of height on body image outcomes, finding that taller adolescents are more likely to perceive themselves as overweight, even holding BMI constant, and are less likely to underestimate their weight category. However, the direction of misclassification diverges by gender: taller boys are more likely to correctly assess their weight category, while taller girls are more likely to overestimate it. These perception shifts translate into behavioral responses for girls but not for boys. 

A one-inch increase in height raises the probability that a girl reports wanting to lose weight by 3.0 percentage points (6.2 percent), with effects concentrated among girls in the normal weight range. 

Taken together, these findings establish height as a salient determinant of body image in adolescence, operating independently of body mass.

Low-cost, remote parental engagement interventions via text messages etc have little effect

 The authors of this study conduct a meta-analysis of 82 randomized controlled trials across more than 20 countries to estimate the effects of low-cost, remote parental engagement interventions delivered through text messages, phone calls, and apps. They estimate a joint likelihood function that incorporates both written studies and unwritten studies identified through trial registries, funder records, research labs, evidence clearinghouses, and other sources. By also recording sample sizes for unwritten studies, the model estimates the distribution of standard errors, identifies write-up probabilities conditional on significance, and characterizes the file drawer by estimating effect distributions for written and unwritten studies. 

Bias-corrected effects are 0.05 SD for test scores, 0.07 SD for grades, 0.05 SD for attendance, and 0.03 SD for enrollment. In the best-identified domain, test scores, statistically insignificant results are still written up at high rates. 

The larger studies tend to estimate smaller latent effects, which could indicate that true effects are correlated with study precision, violating a common meta-analysis assumption. In smaller-sample domains, our approach helps identify selection probabilities by anchoring the absolute write-up rates. 

Any single study estimate is unlikely to dissuade adoption because parent interventions have high marginal value of public funds. Instead, future research is most valuable when it can explain heterogeneity across settings.

Saturday, June 6, 2026

Parental cooperation with the kindergarten is the most important way to support preschoolers' academic skills

 


Research into the academic skills of five-year-old children shows that parents' beliefs and cooperation with their kindergarten are more important than the abundance of parental activities at home in supporting the academic skills of five-year-old children.

 

The study, conducted by Anne-Mai Meesak, Doctorate in Educational Sciences, involved more than 500 five-year-old children and 300 parents. The study assessed children's cognitive processes (i.e. attention and perception, working memory, thinking) and learning, language and mathematical skills individually on a tablet using an e-assessment tool for child development (LAHE). At the same time, parents answered a questionnaire about their beliefs, expectations, cooperation with their kindergarten and activities at home.

To verify the suitability of the assessment tool for assessing children's early skills, the children's results were also compared with teachers' assessments of the same areas. The teachers' assessments and the children's actual results were found to be largely similar. The exception was study skills, which may be more difficult for teachers to assess, as they were based on children's own assessments of their own interest, perceived ability and confidence levels.

The results showed that although children's early cognitive, learning, language and mathematical skills are interlinked, they can also be distinguished and assessed separately. Children's academic skills were significantly predicted by their own cognitive processes and learning skills. Although girls performed slightly better in language skills and Russian-speaking children scored slightly higher in study skills, the skills of Estonian five-year-olds were generally quite similar.

 

Parental beliefs and behaviour

The study’s most telling finding concerns parents' beliefs about their children. Parents who perceived their children as having cognitive difficulties engaged in the least amount of activities at home that supported their children’s skills. This means that the children who needed the most support received the least at home. At the same time, the amount of home activities did not depend on the parents’ educational level.

The study also revealed an interesting connection. Although higher parental expectations regarding the skills children need for school were associated with more frequent home activities, neither parental expectations nor home activities were linked to children's actual performance in language and mathematics. Instead, the parents’ active participation in kindergarten activities proved to be important. This supported both the children's academic skills and encouraged parents to contribute more to shared activities with their child at home.

 

What do the results show?

The results suggest that early childhood education in Estonia plays an important role in supporting children's early skills. Most five-year-olds in Estonia attend kindergarten, where learning and educational activities are play-based and follow the national curriculum, which allows children with different home backgrounds to achieve similar academic results. This ensures the equality and quality of early childhood education in Estonia.

From the societal aspect, the research highlights two findings that help ensure a child’s holistic development. Firstly, it is important to support parents in recognising their children's strengths and weaknesses, so that they can better support their children's early learning. Secondly, parents should be actively involved in kindergarten activities. Therefore, the research confirms that a child’s development is best supported by strong cooperation between home and kindergarten.

Preparing future math teachers to teach data science

 When Eric Weber, professor and chair of mathematics at Iowa State University, talks about data science with future math teachers, he doesn’t begin with code, algorithms or buzzwords.

Instead, he asks them to imagine the scientific method — form a hypothesis, collect data, conduct experiments — running in reverse. 

“In data science, you don’t start with a hypothesis or prediction,” Weber said. “You start with the data that already exists — maybe numbers someone collected years ago, or information gathered for a totally different purpose — and you work backward. You look for patterns, connections or surprises in the data, and those clues help you figure out what questions you should even be asking. So, instead of testing a hypothesis, you’re discovering one.”

This definition is the basis for curriculum Weber and colleagues at Iowa State and the University of Northern Iowa (UNI) have designed to help prepare future math teachers to teach data science in high-school classrooms. Their work reflects a growing national consensus that data science literacy should be part of secondary education.

“Multiple professional societies in mathematics, statistics and mathematics education have released statements in support of teaching data science in high schools,” Weber said. “But while high schools are being encouraged to add data-science courses, the teachers expected to teach them often receive little to no preparation.” 

In a new paper published by Scatterplot, the MAA Journal of Data Science, Weber and his co-authors argue that future math teachers are the educators best positioned to take on this role — but only if their training programs give them the tools to do it.

“Our goal is to help close that gap with the curriculum we’ve created,” Weber said. 

Weber’s co-authors are Heather Gallivan, associate professor of mathematics education at UNI; Lydia Butters, a former math education student at UNI who now teaches at Cedar Falls (Iowa) High School; and Stephen Nathan Mercil, a former mathematics doctoral student at Iowa State who is now an instructor at the University of St. Thomas, Minnesota.

Teaching data science by starting with what teachers already know

The curriculum, which is a five-week, self-contained module delivered within coursework taken by pre-service math teachers at Iowa State and UNI, focuses on the relationship between math and data science.

“We want to show pre-service math teachers that data science isn’t a separate universe from the math they already study,” Weber said. “It’s built on it.”

Many data-science ideas, including modeling, optimization and visualization, grow directly out of algebra, geometry and calculus, so instead of focusing on coding or software, the curriculum module uses familiar mathematical structures to introduce new concepts, Weber said.

A regression line becomes a model. 

A classification problem becomes a geometry puzzle. 

An optimization routine becomes a function‑minimizing exercise.

Weber said this strategy helps pre-service teachers get past the intimidation factor.

“If we can break down the initial barrier of, ‘I don’t know what data science is,’ then their ability to make that transition becomes pretty quick,” he said.

A project shaped by timing and a growing need

The idea for this project began in 2019, when Weber and Mercil first piloted the curriculum at Iowa State. The first full run happened in spring 2020, just as the pandemic forced classes online, Weber said.

The project expanded after Weber teamed up with Gallivan, whose background in statistics helped merge the two universities’ approaches. Funding from the Iowa Space Grant Consortium allowed the team to refine the lessons and offer the curriculum at both campuses starting in 2023.

“The module has been taught every spring at Iowa State and UNI since then, and each year, we add improvements based on student feedback and classroom experience,” said Weber, who is also a member of a committee assembled by the Iowa Department of Education to help write data science learning standards for the state.

To help future teachers see how data science works in practice, the curriculum uses a mix of synthetic and real‑world datasets.

One set simulates animal‑tracking data — timestamps, locations and headings — to give students a chance to explore visualization, dimensionality reduction and prediction. Another uses housing data collected by local high‑school students, allowing pre‑service teachers to practice multiple regression and think about how they might guide their own students through similar projects.

These examples, Weber and team said, help teachers understand how data‑science questions emerge from the data itself — and not from a prewritten hypothesis.

Preparing teachers for an AI-driven world

Weber said a broader goal of the project is to prepare teachers for classrooms where artificial intelligence and automated decision‑making are already part of students’ daily lives, and to help future teachers understand the relationship between AI and data science (“they’re closely related,” Weber said, “but they aren’t the same thing.”).

“Data science is the bigger field,” Weber said. “It’s about using math, statistics and computer tools to make sense of data and find patterns.”

Artificial intelligence, he explained, is about creating systems that can do tasks that usually require human thinking. AI systems learn from data, so they depend heavily on the work data science does.

The link between data science and AI comes from machine learning, a part of AI that learns patterns directly from data.

“Machine learning uses the same math and statistics that data science uses,” Weber said. “Simply put, data science helps us understand what the data is saying, and AI uses that understanding to make decisions or take action.”

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics projects data science jobs will grow 34 percent between 2024 and 2034, a rate that is significantly faster than the average for all occupations.

“Artificial intelligence is powerful, but we'll still need data scientists — humans in the loop,” Weber said. “AI systems don’t ‘think’ the way humans do; they learn patterns from large amounts of data and make predictions based on probability. Without someone who understands how that data was collected, what it represents and where it might be misleading, the results can be wrong or even harmful. Data scientists can interpret and contextualize the output of those systems.”

Early results show promise

The researchers’ curriculum has now run for four consecutive spring semesters at Iowa State and UNI, Weber said, adding that one former student is already teaching data science at a high school. 

Additionally, a pre- and post-assessment administered during the first implementation showed measurable gains in students’ understanding of data science concepts, suggesting the approach is helping future teachers build both confidence and competence.

Weber said these early signs reinforce the need for continued investment in teacher preparation.

“We hope to obtain additional funding that will help us expand our work and support teachers who are already working in the field with in-service programming and classes that could earn teaching licensure renewal credits,” Weber said.

Read the paper:  Weber, E., Gallivan, H., Butters, L., & Nathan Mercil, S. “Leveraging Mathematical Knowledge to Prepare Future Math Teachers to Teach Data Science,” Scatterplot, 3(1). Published online April 2026.