Plus, 7 Utah-related storylines to follow this NFL season
Good morning! Here are today’s temperatures: ☀️ 51 – 87° in Logan 🌤️ 59 – 87° in Salt Lake 🌤️ 72 – 102° in St. George Endlessly swiping on dating apps is proving taxing for younger generations. According to Forbes Health, 80% of millennials and 79% of Gen Z said they’re feeling burnt out on the apps. In part because of their disillusionment with dating apps, some people have turned to more creative dating methods. From billboards (yes, really) to sports clubs, read more about how single adults are dealing with dating app burnout. Also on our minds: Biden, Harris call for end to ‘gun violence epidemic’ following Georgia school shooting that left 4 dead Utah national monument makes list of most beautiful places New study finds no connection between cellphone use and brain cancer |
| BYU study investigates effect of school day length on parent time |
|
| | A new study by BYU and University of Notre Dame researchers found that there is not a significant loss of parent time when children attend full-day kindergarten compared to children who attend school half days. On school days, children in full-day kindergarten only spend 57 minutes less with their mothers each day compared to half-day kindergarten peers, according to the study published in July by the Annenberg Institute. “Even when kids are in full-day kindergarten, they are playing with their parents as much. They’re spending as much one-on-one time with parents. They’re reading with their parents at the same levels,” said Jocelyn Wikle, BYU professor of family life, one of the study’s authors. Parents of full-day kindergarten kids are still able to have quality time with their kids, she said. “They’re just doing it at other times of the day, rather than doing it midday,” Wikle said. Read more about the study’s findings on parent time, literacy skills and more. | There is a lot of young talent in the NFL right now that can trace its playing roots back through the state of Utah. From Puka Nacua to Penei Sewell, and from Jordan Love to Dalton Kincaid, as well as rookies like Jonah Elliss and Kingsley Suamataia, the Beehive State is developing football talent that is being showcased at the highest levels of the sport. Going into the 2024 season, which starts Thursday with a showdown between the Kansas City Chiefs and Baltimore Ravens, there is nearly enough Utah talent to fill an entire NFL roster heading into the year. Currently, there are more than 50 Utah ties on NFL active rosters, with another dozen-plus on practice squads.
Read more about the top Utah-related names and storylines to watch for in the 2024 season. More in Sports Tony Finau was picked to play in the Presidents Cup. Here’s what that means (Deseret News) How super senior Gerry Bohanon is dealing with losing starting QB derby to junior Jake Retzlaff (Deseret News) Former BYU running back Chris Brooks has found a new NFL home (Deseret News) Utah Hockey Club announces 2024-25 broadcast team (Deseret News) | Utah Audit finds Cox, Curtis and Brown campaigns likely gathered enough valid signatures (Deseret News) This Utah wonder made a travel writer’s list of most beautiful places on Earth (Deseret News) Utah’s southeast national parks haul in visitors, money (Deseret News) Here’s why a U.S. Olympic leader says Utah shouldn’t be concerned about keeping the 2034 Winter Games (Deseret News) It’s nearly impossible to win ‘American Ninja Warrior.’ This Utah teen has a shot (Deseret News) The U.S. Biden, Harris call for end to ‘gun violence epidemic’ following Georgia school shooting that left 4 dead (Deseret News) Unrelenting heat grips the West this week (Deseret News) Politics 7 states filed new lawsuit to block Biden’s new student loan cancellation plan (Deseret News) The Deseret News Editorial Board: Why the cost of inflation continues to hurt (Deseret News) Renae Cowley & Frank Pignanelli: What latest polls say about Senate, presidential races (Deseret News) The World U.S. unseals terrorism charges against Hamas leadership (Deseret News) UN welcomes progress in Gaza polio campaign, calls for permanent ceasefire (Reuters) Faith A lawsuit claimed that teaching evolution promotes atheism. Here’s what a federal court said (Deseret News) College students active in their faith have better mental health, including sexual minorities (Deseret News) Health What a new study says about cellphone use and brain cancer (Deseret News) |
Check your inbox tomorrow morning for more news from the Beehive State and beyond! And reply to this email or email [email protected] to tell us what you think of Utah Today. Thanks for reading! — Ariel |
| Copyright © 2024 Deseret News, All rights reserved. |