🎯 Student Mental Health: Coping With Exams & Expectations
Why Student Mental Health Matters in Everyday Life
Members of society view exams not only as a time for individuals to demonstrate what they remember from the topic area(s) studied but believe that the outcome of exams serves as an indicator for self-worth, intelligence, and a predictive indicator for your future based on your academic performance on these tests.
Many youths today experience plenty of sleepless nights leading up to exams, having racing thoughts, experiencing extreme stress surrounding the thought of failing to live up to the expectations of family members, educators, and society.
Numerous world public health organizations, including the World Health Organization (WHO) and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), define adolescence through early adulthood as a developmental period that has a tremendous impact on mental health. During this time, academic stress will have a negative effect on the development of emotional well-being, self-confidence, and continued long-term resiliency of teenagers and young adults.
Most people continue to minimize, normalize, or simply ignore the level of stress that surrounds final examinations.
Phrases like:
Everyone goes through this”
“Stress makes you stronger”
“Marks decide your future”
may sound motivating—but they can silently increase pressure
You’ll learn:
.How it feels to be overwhelmed by exams/expectations
.The impact of stress on the brain and body of a student
.Evidence-based/accessible methods to cope with this
.Ways we can protect mental health without compromising ambition
Mental health is not separating individuals from being successful; rather, it is the cornerstone to success.
🔍 Understanding Student Mental Health
A Student Mental Health Definition: A student’s Mental Health is a student’s emotional health and psychological health as well as their social well-being with respect to their academic careers.
Factors of Student Mental Health: Mental health influences how well students learn and retain information, cope with stress and pressure, develop a positive sense of self-esteem, and recover from failures.
Mental Health Does Not Mean Always Being Calm: It is normal to have negative feelings as well as good feelings about oneself.
Mental Health Is Not to Have the Ability to Always Have Positive Thoughts: The term ‘Stress’ can cause many students to have negative self-talk.
Should a Negative Influence Become Chronic, Overwhelming, Unassisted, and Unsafe, Students Will Develop a Negative Mental State.
⚠️ Why Exams & Expectations Create So Much Pressure
1️⃣ Fear of Failure and “All-or-Nothing” Thinking
Many students believe:
-
One exam = entire future
-
One low score = personal failure
This mindset increases anxiety and reduces learning ability.
2️⃣ External Expectations (Family, Teachers, Society)
Expectations may come from:
*Parents wanting stability or pride
*Teachers focusing on rankings
*Society equating marks with intelligence
Even well-meaning pressure can feel heavy.
3️⃣ Self-Imposed Perfectionism
High-achieving students often struggle the most:
*Unrealistic standards
*Harsh self-criticism
*Fear of disappointing others
4️⃣ Constant Comparison
Grades, ranks, and social media highlight reels fuel unhealthy comparison and self-doubt.
🧠 How Exam Stress Affects the Brain & Body
When you experience a significant amount of stress, your body's response is the activation of the "fight-or-flight," or simply the fight-or-flight response.
Short term stress will cause increased awareness.
Long term or prolonged stress will reduce your ability to concentrate; create problems with memory recall; interfere with your sleep patterns; and increase your sensitivity to emotions.
Because of this, cramming for exams while under too much stress usually does not work.
Stress is not an indicator of lack of preparation for your exam; rather stress indicates that your central nervous system is "overloaded".
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