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Why Parents Should Stop Stressing About ‘Bad’ Grades

Bringing home a bad grade is dreaded by every student. How will their parents react? What will they say? Will there be a punishment?

Parents also dread bad grades for different reasons. They worry about how the grade will impact their child’s future, and they wonder if it’s a reflection of a failing in their own parenting. They struggle with the right response and how to motivate their children to do better in school. Should they offer a reward for good grades? Should they take away something their child enjoys so that they can focus more on their academics? Should they lecture teens about their future, …blame the teacher, …punish them, …hire a tutor, …help them more?

Experts actually don’t think parents should do any of that.

Research has shown that many common parenting responses to bad grades backfire, and in fact, teens would perform better academically if their parents would just stop stressing about their grades. For example, consider a 2016 study from Arizona State University that asked middle school students to rank the top 3 things they believed their parents wanted from a list of 6 options. Three of the values had to do with personal success, such as getting good grades, while the other three values had to do with kindness towards others. The children who believed their parents valued kindness over achievement consistently performed better in school. In fact, the children who saw their parents put more emphasis on success were more likely to be depressed, anxious, act out, and, ironically, earn lower grades.

Facts that Parents Should Keep In Mind

What to Do When a Student Comes Home with a Bad Grade

So what do experts suggest parents do when a dreaded bad grade comes home with your student?

Studies show that parents who show empathy, seek to understand their child’s perspective, and focus on their child’s own ability to manage the problem result in raising children with higher internal motivation, a more positive attitude toward school, greater competence, and increased engagement and effort.

Final Thoughts…

Be careful of how you act and talk around your teen when it comes to their academics. If you tell your child that you’ll be happy as long as they try their best, but then criticize them when they don’t win or become angry when they don’t earn an A in every class, your actions will speak much louder than your words. You need to be consistent in what you say and how you act. And always remember that your child’s grade is the teacher’s assessment of their mastery of one subject matter. It is not an assessment of your child’s value, your teen’s overall intelligence, or your abilities as a parent.

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