Interplay of chronotype and school timing predicts school performance
Metadatos:
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor/es:
Goldín, Andrea P.
Sigman, Mariano
Braier, Gisela
Golombek, Diego A.
Leone, María J.
Fecha:
2020-04Resumen
Most adolescents exhibit very late chronotypes and attend school early in the morning, a misalignment that can affect their
health and psychological well-being. Here we examine how the interaction between the chronotype and school timing of an individual
influences academic performance, studying a unique sample of 753 Argentinian students who were randomly assigned
to start school in the morning (07:45), afternoon (12:40) or evening (17:20). Although chronotypes tend to align partially with
class time, this effect is insufficient to fully account for the differences with school start time. We show that (1) for morning-
attending students, early chronotypes perform better than late chronotypes in all school subjects, an effect that is largest for
maths; (2) this effect vanishes for students who attend school in the afternoon; and (3) late chronotypes benefit from evening
classes. Together, these results demonstrate that academic performance is improved when school times are better aligned with
the biological rhythms of adolescents.