The world is being quietly rearranged by people who write very long documents.


The title they went with Breaking the Early Bell: Lessons from the First Statewide Mandate on School Start Times Noisy translates that to

California admits teens just aren't morning people


California recently mandated later start times for middle and high schools, and the results are in: students are sleeping more, performing better in math and English, and reporting fewer signs of sadness. After decades of ignoring adolescent biology in favor of bus schedules, the state's mandate proved that aligning school with natural sleep rhythms directly improves academic and mental health outcomes.
We've known for years that teenagers have a delayed circadian rhythm, yet we continued to treat 7:00 AM starts as a character-building exercise. But treating sleep as, well, important, California showed that a simple schedule shift can do more for disadvantaged students than many expensive, tech-heavy tutoring programs.
Watch for other states to adopt similar mandates, and whether their results mirror California's academic gains and mental health improvements. Our bet: the willingness to reorganize the adult workday to fit the biology of its children will hit a wall.

Bosses. Bosses are the wall.

If you insist
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