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kexp.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from kexp.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

How to manage COVID impacts on student health habits

COVID-19 caused people to lose the normalcy in their lives, and not being grounded in routines results in “this ongoing sense of uncertainty that can really have a toll on the body,” Early explains. “It’s like having windows open on your computer draining the battery. It’s draining to us, and we don’t know what’s going on.” The survey, taken by 2,002 college students between April 28 and May 2, reveals new lifestyle routines since the pandemic started that could negatively impact overall health. For example: 45 percent have fallen into less structured eating routines, eating whenever they are hungry, and 38 percent have regularly missed meals during the pandemic because they are less hungry or are more stressed.

Climate news is relentlessly, objectively grim Should we ever allow ourselves to feel optimism?

Climate news is relentlessly, objectively grim Should we ever allow ourselves to feel optimism?
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Maneater | COLUMN: Standardized test scores should no longer falter applicants in the college process

Chelsi Peter is a first-year journalism major at MU. She is an opinion columnist who writes about racial injustice and entertainment for the Maneater A year into COVID-19, high school students are given the option to apply test-optional to top universities all around the U.S. Though, once the pandemic is over students will lose this newfound flexibility within the college admission process. At the start of the pandemic, over 700 colleges nationwide were left with no choice but to change their strict SAT and ACT policies to not require students to submit their standardized test scores. Test-optional policies force colleges to take a more holistic view of each student, and push students to not only excel in their classes but find ways to stand out against a pool of students.

Changes in SAT prompt discussion of future of the College Board

College Board The College Board s announcement last week that it is killing the SAT Subject Tests and the SAT Essay was both rumored for some time and a surprise. Many had speculated that the board would be forced by the pandemic to make major changes. In the fall, it turned away hundreds of thousands of students who registered for the SAT (the main SAT and subject tests) because of test-site closures. And the vast majority of colleges are now test optional or test blind, at least for this year, meaning they will not even look at an SAT or ACT score when deciding whether to admit a student. The changes announced were clearly designed to preserve the main SAT and the Advanced Placement program.

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