Behavioral Consult

How to manage school failure


 

The start of the school year brings excitement and some expected anxiety, around seeing friends and undertaking new challenges. While setbacks, small failures, and disappointments are an essential part of a child’s mastery of new challenges, academic and otherwise, occasionally a child will experience school failure in many areas. When this happens, the school usually will engage parents to help understand and address what might be interfering with the child’s performance at school. Parents may turn to their trusted pediatricians for guidance in sorting out school failure, as the list of possible causes is very long. By asking the right questions and knowing your patient, you can efficiently investigate this problem so that your patient may quickly get back on track, both academically and in overall development.

Sad teen with school books, backpack dtiberio/iStock/Getty Images

Are their academic problems a striking change from prior years? If your patients previously had managed coursework with ease, then there is a new problem interfering with their performance, unless they are young enough that earlier years were not as challenging. Possibly a previous school was not as demanding or new academic expectations such as writing an essay or a dramatic increase in reading expectations have exposed a learning disability or attentional issue that is interfering with performance. This can be sorted out by asking more specific questions about their function. Do they struggle more with reading, essay writing, or math? Do they struggle with sustained attention on assignments or handing in completed work? Your patients can help answer these questions, as can as parents and teachers. Neuropsychological testing can elucidate specific learning disabilities or indicate marked problems with attention, working memory, or processing speed that may be improved with cognitive coaching, in-class strategies, and even medications. With older patients, a new problem is less likely to be the first presentation of an underlying learning or attentional issue and will need further investigation.

Do your patients still enjoy school or are they resisting attending? Students who are avoiding school may be struggling with anxiety. This may be a consequence of their academic struggles, as they try to avoid the shame, embarrassment, or discomfort of their failure to understand material, keep up, or perform. Alternately, the anxiety may have come first, leading to an inability to manage the challenges of school and then failure academically. Similarly, a mood disorder such as depression can create problems with attention, energy, interest, and motivation that make it difficult to attend and participate in school.

Dr. Susan D. Swick, attending psychiatrist in the division of child psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and director of the Parenting at a Challenging Time Program at the Vernon Cancer Center at Newton Wellesley Hospital, Boston

Dr. Susan D. Swick

Ask about any family history of school problems and psychiatric disorders as these issues often run in families. Ask if there is anxiety around academic or social performance or more generalized anxiety. Are they experiencing trouble with sleep, energy, appetite? Have they withdrawn from other interests? Are they more tearful or irritable in all settings? When these symptoms are universal (i.e., occurring across settings and affecting school), there is likely an underlying psychiatric disorder driving them, and they require a full psychiatric assessment. It is worth noting that often children or adolescents with mood or anxiety disorders will experience somatic symptoms such as stomach aches or headaches alongside the loss of energy and motivation. They may come to the pediatrician first, and it is important to investigate the likely psychiatric illnesses (anxiety in prepubertal children and anxiety or depression in adolescents) as well as the more esoteric medical problems that could be causing such universal impairment in a child or teenager. Stigma still exists around psychiatric illness and it is powerful when a pediatrician can tell a family that these illnesses are common in young people (affecting nearly 20% of children by the age of 18) and very treatable.

Drug and alcohol abuse may be associated with another psychiatric illness or can be independent problems that interfere with the healthy development and school performance of young people, including middle school students. Find out if your patients are drinking alcohol, using marijuana, vaping, utilizing prescription medications that are not their own, or using other illegal drugs. Substance use that has led to problems at school is by definition a problem (in addition to being illegal) and will not improve without treatment. These young people need a full psychiatric evaluation, and they and their parents require specialized treatment and support to address the substance abuse problem.

Dr. Michael S. Jellinek, professor emeritus of psychiatry and pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston

Dr. Michael S. Jellinek

Of course, school failure may represent other sources of stress. It is critical to find out from your patients if they feel safe at school. Are they being bullied or threatened? Do they have a safe way to get to and from school? Has something else occurred at the school that has left them feeling vigilant and unable to concentrate on classwork? While bullying or living in a neighborhood plagued by violence may not be easy problems to fix, it is critical to find out about them so the adults – parents, teachers, and others – can provide the students with support while directly addressing the safety issue. Do not fail to find out if the fear is at home. Children who are managing physical or sexual abuse may be too stressed to complete homework or even attend school. A caring, curious pediatrician will be a lifeline to a safer future for these children.

Similarly, it is important to find out if your patient is managing less dramatic stresses at home. Perhaps a parent has been seriously ill, working two jobs, or managing a problem with drugs or alcohol, and your patient is caring for that person, or for siblings, instead of keeping up with schoolwork. Perhaps there has been a stressful loss or transition, such as the death of a grandparent or pet, the loss of a job, or a big move, or family discord/violence that has made it difficult for your patient to focus on homework or interfered with parental supervision or homework help. Perhaps your patient has gotten a job to help the family financially and has no time for homework. Bringing such a challenge out into the open and rallying support for your patient and the family in these circumstances is often enough to foster adaptation to these stresses and a return to healthy function in school.

Finally, it is possible that school failure is a function of milder imbalances in a young person’s life. Some children may respond to the expanded independence of adolescence by making poor choices. When do they go to bed at night? Are they staying up late playing video games or surfing the web? Not all insomnia represents illness. Find out how much independence your patients have and how they are managing their time and responsibilities. Help them to think about how to protect time for both responsibilities and relaxation. You also may help the parents of these young people think about how to set expectations and basic rules while stepping back appropriately to allow for expanding independence in ways that will help their children to flourish.

Once defined, school failure should be comprehensively treated because the educational consequences and potentially lifelong damage to self-esteem can be severe. Setting reasonable expectations, curriculum adjustments, any needed psychiatric treatment, building on a child’s strengths, and paying attention to self-esteem are the hallmarks of effective interventions.

Dr. Swick is an attending psychiatrist in the division of child psychiatry at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, and director of the Parenting at a Challenging Time (PACT) Program at the Vernon Cancer Center at Newton Wellesley Hospital, also in Boston. Dr. Jellinek is professor emeritus of psychiatry and pediatrics, Harvard Medical School, Boston. Email them at pdnews@mdedge.com.

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