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  • Depressing News
    About one out of every 12 adolescents experienced what is termed as major depression last year, according to a study by the Substance...
  • Identity Theft
    Antidepressants, such as Prozac and Zoloft, are among the nation’s most prescribed drugs, and some users have been on them since they...
  • A Mother of a Job
    Under the heading, “Let’s hope they don’t decide to unionize,” The typical mom should earn about $69,135 a year, according to a recent...
  • A (Sometimes) Inconvenient Child
    Kids today are as environmentally aware as ever—and sometimes they cast a disapproving eye at their less-than-green parents. Few would...
  • Above the Tray
    Students have long juggled school, work and the occasional toga party in their college careers. Now, universities are asking them to...
  • The Changing Face of Language
    A recent study found that the informal language of e-communication—emoticons, text shortcuts like LOL, etc.—sometimes finds its way...
  • 'C' if for Cash
    A few schools across the United States are doling out cash and prizes to their students for doing well. Proponents call it motivation....

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Most Likely to Succeed? Maybe Not.
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Most Likely to Succeed? Maybe Not.

A new study suggests students who excel in high school sometimes find life, post-diploma, disturbingly challenging.

The study found 20 percent of highachieving high-schoolers were not meeting personal goals by the time they reached 26. They still did a little better than the average high-school graduate, of whom 29 percent were not financially independent by age 26, surprising researchers.

“What’s scary is it’s unpredictable,” says John Schulenberg, a professor of developmental psychology at the University of Michigan. “We used to think if things were going well in high school, they’d continue to go well.”

On the up side, high-school underachievers sometimes thrived once they claimed their bit of sheepskin. Go figure. (Psychology Today)

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