you’ve heard a teenager say “I only get _hours of sleep and i'm fine” However, in the book The Teenage Brain, Frances Jensen shares her research about how many hours of sleep a teenager should get at night and the main causes of sleep deprivation. Teenagers need to be informed that Sleep deprivation among all ages can have a major impact on the actions and lives of people especially teenagers because their brains are developing at such a fast pace.This finding challenges the belief that it’s only a short
versus the Teenage Brain The play “Romeo and Juliet” by William Shakespeare is a play about two “Star-crossed lovers” from different sides of two feuding households. Throughout the play, the main characters Romeo and Juliet, make a series of irrational, un thought out, and compulsive decisions. In Fact, most of the play actually revolves around these two characters poor choices. However, today's scientists say that decisions like these are actually a normal part of the average teenage brain. Many
make them feel better about themselves. However, in the book The Teenage Brain, Frances Jensen shares her theory about her opinion on how alcohol is bad for the adolescent brain. Teenagers need to know that drinking destroys your brain and decreases dopamine which is the part in your brain that senses you to be happy and without it you’ll find yourself always angry. Alcohol usage slows down the brain and cause you to effect the brain and make bad choices Teenagers often say that drinking will ease
Two parts make up the brain, grey and white matter. The white matter forms the connections between the different parts of the brain and the grey matter stores all the information. White matter does not mature until we are in our early twenties, but grey matter matures when we are preteens. An adult brain the brain works together with several neural connections while teenagers are not able to fully connect. The connection in a teenage brain are not fully formed yet and it impacts
documentary “Inside the Teenage Brain” mentions that teenager’s prefrontal cortex is going through an unexpected growth spurt and there is a thickening of gray matter. This part of the brain has a lot to do with thinking which can give us some insight as too what’s going on with teens. The use it or lose it comes into play with teenagers and they are faced with many risky decisions such as drug and alcohol use. It’s alarming to think that this time is extremely critical for brain development and can
but also she uses the example of Frances Jensen to on the one hand strength her viewpoint and on the other hand, appeal to authority as we can see in the former of the article “ Frances Jensen is a mother, an author, and a neurologist. In The Teenage Brain: A Neuroscientist’s Survival Guide to Raising Adolescents and Young Adults (HarperCollins), written with Amy Ellis Nutt, she offers a parenting guide laced with the latest MRI studies. By her account, adolescents suffer from the cerebral equivalent
to the development of an adolescent’s brain. The prefrontal cortex often continues to develop into a person’s mid 20’s which makes the brain more susceptible to damage from alcohol. The main problem with previous studies is that they only focused on adolescents who had already developed Alcohol Use Disorder (AUD). Up until now, researchers have been unable to identify the cause of AUD or determine how early a brain disorder can be detected in a teenage brain. In order to obtain a non-biased sample
sneak around, keep secrets, lie, and do much more. This story is highly influential as it gives us perspective from the adolescent’s minds. I do not believe that teenagers can yet perceive the concept of love. Teenager’s brains are impetuous and impulsive. In the article Teenage Brains
Annotated Bibliography Popova, Maria. "Sleep and the Teenage Brain.” Brain Pickings. 2015. Jan. 2016. This site was helpful to my essay because it provided useful information about the dangers of sleep deprivation. It also provided a good comparison about how deprived of sleep teenagers are, which I used as my hook. The article seemed credible considering almost all if the information was directly from a published book, cited below. "Sleep in Adolescents." Nationwide Children's Hospital. 2009
been true that a stranger is normally valued less than a person that people are close to. However, in younger generations, strangers' opinions are becoming more and more important to them. For instance, in Stuart Wolpert's article entitled “The teenage brain on social media”, his evidence from his experiment suggests that even though these are strangers' opinions, they responded to the influence, positively and negatively. Furthermore, this was just one observation from one experiment. He most likely