Monday, March 9, 2026

Teacher grading violations and subsequent student cheating

This study looks at how teachers' rule violations in grading affect students' ethical behavior. Using administrative data from high-stakes exams, combining teacher-assigned internal scores with externally graded national exam scores, the study tracks teacher grading violations and subsequent student cheating, exploring three potential mechanisms: imitation (learning that rules can be broken), positive reciprocity (responding favorably to favorable treatment), and negative reciprocity (retaliating against unfavorable treatment). 

Students are significantly more likely to cheat when teachers break the rules to their detriment (systematically undergrading), consistent with both imitation and negative reciprocity. However, when teachers systematically overgrade, responses vary by community structure. In heterogeneous communities, overgrading increases student cheating, suggesting imitation dominates. In homogeneous communities, students respond by cheating less, consistent with positive reciprocity dominating. This pattern holds across multiple homogeneity measures, including surname concentration and residential clustering. 

Survey measures of mutual respect and support between students and teachers confirm this pattern.

"Feel" as a Determinant of College Choice: Evidence from Campus Tour Weather

 The feeling or impression that students get about enrolling in a particular college may be an important determinant of their college application decision. 

Combining institutional records on college campus tour participants over the last decade with hourly weather information, this study leverages tour weather as a plausibly exogenous shock to students' "feel" for attending the toured college, finding that poor tour weather reduces participants’ likelihood of applying. 

Tour participants, for example, are 10 percent less likely to apply when their tour is hot and 8 percent less likely when precipitation occurs during their tour. Using administrative data documenting where all tour participants enroll in college, however that tour weather has little to no impact on the quality or type of college that participants ultimately attend. Nevertheless, the results suggest that students' "feel" for attending a college can play an important role in the college application decision.

Can School Matching Improve Student Achievement?

 This study examines two approaches to improving urban school systems: changing who gets to go to existing schools (reallocation) and restructuring school portfolios through closures and reconstitution (resource augmentation). 

Using data from New York City high schools, the authors estimate models of school effects allowing for both vertical school quality differences and horizontal student-specific match effects. 

While sophisticated reallocation policies that optimize student-school matches can generate modest educational gains, they are constrained by limited seats at highly effective schools. Simple resource-augmentation policies targeting replacement of low-performing schools achieve comparable improvements with less systemic disruption. 

Analysis of NYC's school closures reveals that basic graduation rate metrics effectively identify struggling schools, suggesting complex value-added models may be unnecessary for targeting closure decisions. Our findings indicate that capacity constraints, rather than poor school matching, primarily drive educational inequality.

Saturday, March 7, 2026

Teenagers don’t just influence each other – they learn from each other


Why are adolescents so sensitive to their peers’ behaviour? And is this sensitivity necessarily negative, as the term peer pressure often implies? In his PhD dissertation, UvA behavioural scientist Andrea Gradassi demonstrates that adolescents are particularly influenced by classmates to whom they are socially close, such as friends, as well as by peers who occupy high-status positions within the classroom social network.

‘The goal of this dissertation was to examine peer influence, particularly during adolescence,’ Gradassi explains. ‘Traditionally, psychology has tended to frame peer influence at this stage of life as passive and harmful.’

Gradassi challenges this narrow perspective by asking a more fundamental question: why are adolescents so responsive to their peers in the first place? From an evolutionary standpoint, learning from others is highly adaptive. Observing peers allows individuals to avoid costly trial-and-error learning. As Gradassi puts it: ‘If you look at what your peers are doing and they are successful, that behaviour may also be useful for you.’

Real experiments in the classroom

A distinctive feature of Gradassi’s research is its grounding in realistic social environments. Rather than relying solely on laboratory settings, he conducted experiments in Dutch secondary schools.

‘We went into schools and mapped the relationships among students,’ he explains. Using social network analysis, Gradassi identified friendships, popular students and socially central figures within each classroom. These data were then used to design experiments that measured peer influence systematically.

In one study, students completed tasks such as estimating the number of animals in an image. After submitting their initial response, they were shown the answer of a selected classmate and given the opportunity to revise their own.

The findings were clear: adolescents were more strongly influenced by friends than by socially distant classmates. ‘When the other person was a friend, students adjusted their answers more,’ Gradassi notes. This suggests that classroom learning is shaped not only by accuracy, but also by social closeness and trust.

Social status also played a significant role. Adolescents were more likely to incorporate information from peers who occupied central positions in the social network—students who were well connected and socially prominent.

Importantly, influence extended beyond popularity alone. Peers perceived as academically competent also exerted greater influence on others’ learning decisions. Together, these findings demonstrate that educational outcomes are shaped not only by individual ability, but also by the structure of social relationships within the classroom.

Older adolescents respond to more positive influence

One of the most striking findings in Gradassi’s dissertation concerns prosocial behaviour. In a large-scale study involving 456 Dutch adolescents, participants were given the option to donate money to charity or keep it for themselves. Based on prevailing theories, Gradassi expected selfish behaviour to increase with age.

Instead, the data revealed the opposite pattern: more responsive to positive peer influence. ‘When older adolescents saw someone donating money, they were more likely than younger adolescents to follow that example,’ Gradassi explains.

These findings suggest that peer influence can be a force for good. Positive role models may become increasingly influential during later adolescence, highlighting opportunities to harness peer dynamics in constructive ways.

Social networks and social media

Gradassi’s findings are particularly relevant in an era in which social influence is amplified online. Social media platforms continuously map social connections and can intensify peer dynamics.

Understanding who influences whom—and under what circumstances—is therefore crucial for educators, policymakers and adolescents themselves. ‘It is important to inform the public about how these social dynamics operate,’ Gradassi concludes.

Depression, suicidal ideation among college students increased over past 15 years

 Results of an analysis of health survey data from more than 560,000 U.S. college students concludes that depression symptoms have steadily increased over the past 15 years, particularly among women, minorities and students experiencing financial stress. 

The study, led by researchers at Johns Hopkins Children’s Center along with McDaniel College and University of Maryland, specifically found that the rate of self-reported depression symptoms continued to grow over the 15 years of the analysis period (2007–2022), extending a trend reported by many researchers for the past two decades. 

According to Carol Vidal, M.D., Ph.D., M.P.H., child and adolescent psychiatrist at the Children’s Center, thoughts of suicide, or “suicidal ideation,” increased across all demographic groups regardless of race, age, gender or financial stress, but reports of other symptoms, such as restlessness and lack of concentration rose most steeply among female, financially distressed and minority students. 

A report about the  new study, published in the Journal of Affective Disorders, concluded that the findings highlight growing mental health disparities among college students. The report adds that the consistently steeper increases among women, students of racial minority groups, and those experiencing financial stress reveal that the rise in symptoms of depression is not uniform, and that the growth of suicide ideation across all groups signals an urgent need for prevention and targeted support strategies on college campuses.

For the study, researchers analyzed data from the Healthy Minds Study, a long-running research project led by several universities across the country that surveys college students about their mental health.

Depression symptoms were assessed using the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9), a tool used by psychiatrists and other mental health providers to diagnose and monitor the severity of depression. The questionnaire asks about nine symptoms, including suicidal ideation, poor appetite and trouble sleeping. The students are asked to give each symptom a score from 0 to 3 — 0 meaning never and 3 meaning they experience that symptom every day. 

Points are then added together for a total score. An overall score of 0 to 4 means the person likely is not experiencing depression. A score of 20 to 27 indicates severe depression. 

In the new analysis, average overall PHQ-9 scores increased every year. The highest symptom increase was seen in suicidal ideation, which increased by nearly 154%. The next highest was restlessness, which increased by nearly 80%. Trouble concentrating increased by over 77%. 

Vidal says that some minority students and those experiencing financial stress are considered vulnerable populations, and are more likely to encounter both acute life events and chronic stressors that can lead to psychological and physiological changes, including elevated stress hormones. 

The study also showed that sleep disturbance and appetite problems grew significantly faster among women compared with men. But Vidal says that men are generally less likely to report mental health symptoms. She noted that suicide rates are higher among men than women. 

Students who reported financial stress specifically saw higher PHQ-9 scores in symptoms of poor appetite, feelings of worthlessness and suicidal ideation. Minority racial and ethnic groups overall, but especially Hispanic students, saw higher PHQ-9 scores in symptoms of sleep problems. Women showed an average overall increase of 0.041 points each year in losing interest in activities that were once enjoyable, compared with a 0.028-point increase per year among men. 

Vidal says colleges, universities, parents and health care providers can all play a role in addressing differences in mental health indicators by being alert to those differences, addressing underlying stressors among the most vulnerable populations and seeking services when needed. . 

DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2025.121002

Friday, March 6, 2026

Autonomy in school: how autonomy is experienced matters more than how much autonomy is provided

Research identifies two distinct motivational pathways: one that supports persistence and achievement, and another that fuels procrastination and school burnout

As academic pressure intensifies for adolescents worldwide, educators and parents face a familiar dilemma: Should schools give students more autonomy to support motivation and well-being, or does structure and control remain essential for performance? A new study published in the Journal of Adolescence suggests that this question may be too simplistic.

The research shows that how autonomy is experienced matters more than how much autonomy is provided. Specifically, autonomy satisfaction (feeling that one’s actions reflect personal values and interests) and autonomy frustration (feeling pressured, controlled, or coerced) are not opposite ends of a single continuum. Instead, they represent distinct psychological experiences that steer adolescents toward markedly different academic and emotional outcomes.

Adolescence is a pivotal developmental stage in which the desire for independence increasingly collides with structured educational demands. This tension becomes especially pronounced in high-stakes learning environments, such as high schools preparing students for competitive college entrance examinations.

In a study published online on January 15, 2026, researchers led by Dr. Yi Jiang examined the learning experiences of 1,639 high school students.

Autonomy isn’t just a simple slider from ‘low’ to ‘high’,” the research team explains. “Students can experience limited choice without feeling controlled. However, when they actively feel pressured or coerced, that is, when autonomy is frustrated, we observe clear links to maladaptive learning behaviors and school burnout.”

The study identified two distinct pathways associated with adolescents’ autonomy experiences:

  • The Thriving Path: When students experienced autonomy satisfaction, they were more likely to persist in the face of academic challenges. This sustained effort, in turn, was associated with stronger academic achievement, highlighting the motivational benefits of feeling self-directed and volitional in learning.
  • The Stressing Path: Autonomy frustration was strongly linked to procrastination, which emerged as a key contributor to school burnout, a state of emotional exhaustion and disengagement from schoolwork. Importantly, this pathway primarily undermined students’ well-being rather than directly lowering performance.

The study also uncovered gender differences in how autonomy experiences relate to learning behaviors. While autonomy was important for all students, boys appeared to rely more strongly on autonomy satisfaction to sustain persistence and motivation in academic tasks.

These findings suggest that supporting autonomy is not simply about offering more choices,” the authors note. “Reducing controlling pressures and need-thwarting practices may be just as critical, particularly in high-pressure educational contexts.”

 

Reference
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1002/jad.70107

10.1002/jad.70107 

Thursday, March 5, 2026

How much sleep do teens get? Six-seven hours.

 

And that is definitely not enough.


Teenagers across the country are getting less sleep, a researcher from the University of Connecticut reports on March 2 in JAMA. And the problem appears to be societal.

Teens not getting enough sleep has been reported as a problem in the medical literature since at least the turn of the 20th century: a 1905 study in The Lancet of the sleep hours of boys in British boarding schools worried that they were not getting enough sleep due to nighttime lighting, and suggested that “late to bed and early to rise is neither physiological nor wise”. Later on in the 1950s public concern focused on evening entertainments such as radio and television keeping teens awake too late. More recently, research has connected too little sleep with overstimulation, mental health problems, accidents, and academic challenges.

But teens are getting even less sleep than they used to, report UConn School of Medicine psychiatric epidemiologist T. Greg Rhee and colleagues in their latest look at the Youth Risk Behavior Survey done by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The Youth Risk Behavior Survey provides nationally-representative data to examine long-term trends of risk behaviors in teens. Rhee and his colleagues’ analysis of the survey data from 2007 to 2023 shows more than 50% of teens are reporting less than 5 hours of sleep a night in the most recent survey, more sleep deprived teens than in any previous survey. Less than five hours of sleep a night is considered very short sleep, and is associated with emotional regulation issues such as anxiety and depression, poor academic performance or neurocognitive development, and increased risks for obesity and diabetes. Teen getting less than 5 hours of sleep a night increased across all subgroups in the most recent survey, whether they had risk factors such as depressive thoughts, using controlled substances, or had large amounts of screen time, or no risk factors at all. The number of teens getting sufficient sleep, defined as eight or more hours a night, dropped from more than 30% in 2007 to less than 25% in 2023.

“These trends highlight the need for population-level interventions among teens. For example, later school start times can help with longer sleep, which may lead to better mental health outcomes and greater academic engagement,” said Rhee and his colleagues. 
 
More research is needed into which interventions might be effective on the population level. For example, Rhee suggests researchers examine whether reforming academic or extracurricular schedules to reduce evening demands could improve sleep health among teens.