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Sleepover
A sleepover, also known as a pajama party or a slumber party, is a party most commonly held by children or teenagers, where a guest or guests are invited to stay overnight at the home of a friend, sometimes to celebrate birthdays or other special events. A lock-in is a similar event held in a setting other than a private home, such as a school or church. The sleepover is often called a "rite of passage" as a young child, or a teenager, begins to assert independence and to develop social connections outside the immediate family.〔Judith Ancer, ("Sleepovers need not be a nightmare - and help kids to be autonomous in a safe environment" ), ''The Sunday Times'' (South Africa), June 10, 2012.〕〔Edward Eveld, ("Sleepovers a rite of passage for kids" ), ''Chicago Tribune'', August 14, 2005.〕〔Barbara F. Meltz, ("The sleep-over: A rite of passage" ), ''Boston Globe'', October 13, 1994 .〕 Beginning in the 1990s, commentators wrote about a perceived new trend of parents allowing co-ed sleepovers for teenagers, with both boys and girls staying overnight together. While some writers decried the trend, others defended it as a safer alternative to teenage dating outside the house.〔Peter Annin, ("Slumbering Around" ), ''Newsweek'', November 4, 1996 .〕〔Emily Wax, ("Coed All-Nighters Put Trust on Line; Not All Parents Are Losing Sleep Over Teen Fad" ), ''The Washington Post'', November 16, 2000 , reprinted as ("Coed all-nighters cause unrest" ), ''Sarasota Herald-Tribune'', November 21, 2000.〕〔Betsy Hart, ("Coed sleepovers: Teenagers learn volumes from parents' decision-making" ), Scripps Howard News Service in ''The Daily News'' (Kentucky), November 24, 2000.〕〔Amy Dickinson, ("Coed Sleepovers" ), ''Time'', January 8, 2001.〕 ==References==
抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Sleepover」の詳細全文を読む
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