logo
Rising heat is causing students to underperform across the globe

Rising heat is causing students to underperform across the globe

As climate change drives temperatures higher, prolonged periods of heat exposure are doing more than just making classrooms uncomfortable. According to a new systematic review published in PLOS Climate, extended exposure to heat significantly impairs students' cognitive abilities, affecting their academic performance, especially in complex subjects such as mathematics.
The study analyzed previous research encompassing nearly 14.5 million students across 61 countries. The findings show clear evidence that heat exposure over time is correlated to lower scores in math and other complex cognitive tasks among elementary, middle and high school students.
Even on days when temperatures were between 80 and 90 degrees Fahrenheit, the data show that students can experience heat stress, followed by a drop in cognitive performance. The effects of heat exposure on learning are often not seen until much later, said Konstantina Vasilakopoulou, a Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology professor who co-authored the paper with Matthaios Santamouris of the University of New South Wales. 'So many studies have found that temperatures of the year before a serious exam affect students more than temperatures during the exam year itself. We simply do not have enough time to recover,' Vasilakopoulou said.
According to the paper, students from lower-income families often have less access to air-conditioned classrooms and homes, making them more vulnerable to the harmful effects of heat. Racial disparities were also evident in the data, with Black and Latino students in the U.S. seeing up to three times greater cognitive losses due to heat compared to their white peers.
'There are larger numbers of Black and Hispanic people living in poorer areas where the conditions are worse, temperatures higher, and air conditioning and ventilation often lacking,' Vasilakopoulou said.
Future climate scenarios predict even greater, and in some ways, surprising challenges. By 2050, if current warming trends continue without adequate adaptation measures, students in currently cooler regions may start to suffer the same problems that those in warmer climates do now. That's because in places that are already hot, there's more likely to be some amount of infrastructure to deal with the heat, whereas in colder areas, that may not be the case.
Adaptive strategies such as improved ventilation, air conditioning and green infrastructure can help reduce the effects, but many schools, particularly those in underserved areas, lack the resources to implement them effectively.
In Southern California, the findings resonate deeply. 'As classroom temperatures rise over time — especially during extended heat waves or in schools with less shade, poorer insulation and lacking access to air conditioning — students tend to show declines in attention, memory and test performance,' said Edith de Guzman, a climate researcher at UCLA's Luskin Center for Innovation. Heat can also affect students' abilities to enjoy outdoor recreational activities, having serious effects on their physical, mental and social well-being, she said.
In L.A., public school starts in August — instead of September — further exposing students to heat while at school, and ultimately affecting those attending under-resourced campuses more.
Consider, for example, Orange County's Garden Grove Unified School District, which serves cities including Anaheim and Santa Ana, where many campuses lack air conditioning, according to Thelma Briseno, a senior director at the L.A.-based nonprofit Climate Resolve. In previous summers, teachers have reported temperatures reaching 100 degrees on some days and having to resort to makeshift strategies to keep students cool, such as going out and buying bottles of water and fans.
'Things like an indoor heat standard really need to be in place, and there's nothing like that that exists right now for schools,' Briseno said.
Some of the most striking findings from the various papers reviewed in the article found that for every 1 degree Celsius drop in temperature in a classroom, students' speed and accuracy increased by 7.5% and 0.6%, respectively. Alarmingly, using the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change's projected increase of 1.5 degrees Celsius over preindustrial levels by 2050, another study found that if no cooling measures are taken, elementary school students may see a cognitive performance drop of 9.8%.
After reviewing the findings, Dr. Marc Futernick, a Climate Resolve board member and managing editor of the Journal of Climate Change and Health, emphasized that what is at stake is no less than the future of humanity.
'If we are moving into a world where we can't think, create or strategize as well as we could in the past, what does that mean for our future?' he said. 'We should be focused entirely on preventing these effects, on controlling the climate crisis the best we can, and adapting our communities to things like extreme heat, preventing the exposure in the first place.'
Climate Resolve has advocated solutions such as 'cool roofs,' increased tree planting and cool pavement technologies, which significantly reduce temperatures. 'You obviously have to address the issue from a community standpoint,' Briseno said.
'Community cooling in residential areas and also within the school building themselves,' she concluded, 'it's a collaborative effort between people in the built environment.'
For example, a community-driven 'cool communities initiative' in the Pacoima neighborhood of L.A. has proven to be successful, creating noticeable improvements in neighborhood temperature comfort.
The study emphasizes the urgent need for policymakers and education leaders to prioritize protecting students from rising temperatures. Without decisive action, educational disparities intensified by heat exposure will continue to grow, potentially hindering entire generations' abilities to learn and succeed.
'We penalize vulnerable populations and need to provide opportunities for them to recover and lead the future,' Vasilakopoulou said. 'We can't pretend that we're all equal. [We need] better conditions for our homes, for our schools, and for our cities.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump Administration Suspends UCLA Grants After Rights Probe
Trump Administration Suspends UCLA Grants After Rights Probe

Bloomberg

time20 hours ago

  • Bloomberg

Trump Administration Suspends UCLA Grants After Rights Probe

The federal government is suspending certain research funding to the University of California at Los Angeles, citing concerns about antisemitism and bias on campus, according UCLA Chancellor Julio Frenk. In a message to students and staff, Frenk said the freeze could affect hundreds of grants from agencies including the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health. He called the decision a blow to researchers and the broader public who benefit from their work in areas such as medical innovation and space exploration.

The Bright Side: Leopard seal love songs structured like nursery rhymes, study finds
The Bright Side: Leopard seal love songs structured like nursery rhymes, study finds

Yahoo

timea day ago

  • Yahoo

The Bright Side: Leopard seal love songs structured like nursery rhymes, study finds

Male leopard seals compose and sing their own songs to woo potential mating partners, scientists in Australia have found. The songs are structured much like nursery rhymes, making them easy to remember. "It kind of sounds like sound effects from an '80s sci-fi" movie, the lead author of the study said. When male leopard seals dive down into icy Antarctic waters, they sing songs structured like nursery rhymes in performances that can last up to 13 hours, scientists said Thursday. The Australian-led team of researchers compared the complexity of the songs composed by the big blubbery mammals to those of other animals -- as well as human musicians like the Beatles and Mozart. Lucinda Chambers, a bioacoustics PhD student at Australia's University of New South Wales, told AFP that people are often surprised when they hear the "otherworldly" hoots and trills sung by leopard seals. "It kind of sounds like sound effects from an '80s sci-fi" movie, said the lead author of a new study in the journal Scientific Reports. During the spring breeding season, male leopard seals dive underwater and perform their songs for two minutes before returning to the surface for air. They then repeat this performance for up to 13 hours a day, according to the study. The researchers determined that all leopard seals share the same set of five "notes" which are impossible to distinguish between individuals. However each seal arranges these notes in a unique way to compose their own personal song. "We theorise that they're using that structure as a way to broadcast their individual identity, kind of like shouting their name out into the void," Chambers said. The researchers believe the males use these songs to woo potential female mates -- and ward off rivals. 'Songbirds of the ocean' The team studied recordings of 26 seals captured by study co-author Tracey Rogers off the coast of Eastern Antarctica throughout the 1990s. "They're like the songbirds of the Southern Ocean," Rogers, who is also from the University of New South Wales, said in a statement. "During the breeding season, if you drop a hydrophone into the water anywhere in the region, you'll hear them singing." The team analysed how random the seals' sequences of notes were, finding that their songs were less predictable than the calls of humpback whales or the whistles of dolphins. But they were still more predictable than the more complex music of the Beatles or Mozart. "They fall into the ballpark of human nursery rhymes," Chambers said. This made sense, because the songs need to be simple enough so that each seal can remember their composition to perform it every day, she explained. She compared it to how "nursery rhymes have to be predictable enough that a child can memorise them". But each seal song also needs to be unpredictable enough to stand out from those of the other males. Leopard seals, which are the apex predator in Antarctic waters, swim alone and cover vast distances. They likely evolved their particular kind of song so that their message travels long distances, the researchers theorised. Varying pitch or frequency might not travel as far in their environment, Chambers said. Female seals also sing sometimes, though the scientists do not know why. Chambers suggested it could be to teach their pups how to sing -- exactly how this talent is passed down is also a mystery. But she added that this behaviour has never been observed in the wild. The females could also just be communicating with each other, she said. (FRANCE 24 with AFP)

UCLA says it is losing some federal research funding
UCLA says it is losing some federal research funding

NBC News

timea day ago

  • NBC News

UCLA says it is losing some federal research funding

The California university UCLA said Thursday that it has been notified that it is losing federal research funding over alleged antisemtism, a move the chancellor called "a loss for America." 'UCLA received a notice that the federal government, through its control of the National Science Foundation (NSF), the National Institutes of Health (NIH) and other agencies, is suspending certain research funding to UCLA,' university Chancellor Julio Frenk said in a message to the campus community. 'This is not only a loss to the researchers who rely on critical grants. It is a loss for Americans across the nation whose work, health, and future depend on the groundbreaking work we do,' he wrote. The announced notice comes as the Trump administration has sought to pressure or retaliate against universities across the country following student protests on college campuses about the war in Gaza. Some Republican members of Congress and others have called the protests and some of the conduct antisemitic. Frenk in his message to the UCLA community said that the federal government used antisemitism as its reason for the loss of funding. "In its notice to us, the federal government claims antisemitism and bias as the reasons. This far-reaching penalty of defunding life-saving research does nothing to address any alleged discrimination," he wrote. UCLA announced Tuesday that it has agreed to pay $6 million to settle a lawsuit that alleged discrimination, and which was brought by Jewish students and a faculty member. The lawsuit filed in June 2024 accused the university of failing to take action when pro-Palestinian protesters set up encampments on campus that spring. Frenk wrote in the message to the Bruin community — as the UCLA community is known — that antisemitism has no place on campus but acknowledged room for improvement. He said that the university has taken steps to combat it, and put in place policies about student protests. The National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health did not immediately respond to requests for comment late Thursday. Frenk in his message to the university did not say how much federal funding will be suspended. He highlighted important work done by UCLA, which included helping to create what would become the Internet, and he said researchers "are now building new technologies that could fuel entire industries and help safeguard our soldiers." President Donald Trump during his campaign pledged to crack down on universities because of student protests against the war in Gaza, which Israel launched against Hamas after the Hamas attacks on Oct. 7, 2023, that targeted Israeli civilians, including at a music festival. There is now a humanitarian crisis in Gaza, and this week t he United Nations said the U.N.'s Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, or IPC, showed mounting evidence of a worsening famine there. The IPC emphasized that its warning constituted an alert and was not a formal 'famine classification.' Columbia University in New York City was among the universities targeted by the Trump administration over allegations of antisemitism, and last week Columbia announced a settlement with the federal government in an effort to restore cut federal funding. Brown University in Rhode Island said Wednesday that it reached an agreement with the federal government to restore funding. The university said that agreement resolves three reviews of Brown's 'compliance with federal nondiscrimination obligations.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store