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Early Class: Half-hour Reprieve
Duke has been in the news for getting rid of eight o'clock classes
and fighting sleep deprivation among students. Both facts are true,
but the two actions actually have nothing to do with each other,
despite press reports to the contrary.
In the fall, university officials will implement an individual wellness
plan for all first-year students that will focus on sleep, exercise,
and nutrition. This health initiative was prompted by a growing concern
among faculty members, student-affairs officials, and staff members
at Counseling and Psychological Services (CAPS) that students weren't
getting enough sleep. The university decided to take a preventive
approach to sleep deprivation and other issues that cause students
to come to CAPS or the student health center, explains Ryan Lombardi,
assistant dean of students.
While the wellness initiative was being put together, a second and
unrelated committee was reviewing the university course schedule,
which has been in place for at least two decades, and assessing whether
it still meets student and faculty needs. The committee of faculty
members, administrators, and undergraduates found that the current
overcrowding of classes between 10:00 a.m. and 2:00 p.m. on Mondays
through Thursdays forced many students to choose between two or more
classes offered at the same time. It recommended spreading out courses
over the day and the week.
As a result, more courses will be offered during the first period
of the day, although that period will now begin at 8:30 or 8:45 instead
of 8:00, says Judith Ruderman, vice provost and a committee member.
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