Transcendental Meditation Reduces Stress, Improves Achievement in Teens

A new randomized controlled trial published in the
journal Education found that ninth-graders that practiced the transcendental
meditation (TM) technique had significant improvements in emotional stress
symptoms, quality of sleep and academic achievement when compared to students
that spent the same time in silent reading. This was the first randomized
control trial to investigate the effects of a meditation-based school program
on standardized tests.
These
findings are helpful for teens that, as reported in the online science news
service EurekAlert!, “report stress well above what they believe to be
healthy. Thirty-one percent of teens report feeling overwhelmed and 36 percent
report feeling fatigued as a result of stress. Over a third of teens report
that their stress level has increased in the past year, while around half of
teens don't feel they are doing enough to manage their stress. This increased stress is linked to poor academics, as well as a
number of other measures, including
lower attendance, and unhealthy behaviors around sleep, eating and
substance use.”
The new
research corroborates past findings on TM and stress, emotional health,
academic performance and social behavior and concludes that learning the
transcendental meditation technique positively affects quality of life in all
these categories.
Source: Jacksonville Transcendental Meditation
Center. For more information, call 904-375-9517 or visit [email protected].