
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us Fan Mail
Your teen can be getting good grades and still be running on empty.
If you’re seeing more “I don’t care” language, irritability over small things, procrastination that feels unlike them, or a kind of emotional flatness that wasn’t there before, it may not be attitude at all.
It may be quiet teen burnout, the kind that doesn’t look dramatic enough to trigger alarms but slowly wears a student down.
We break down what student burnout actually is, why it often hides in high-performing kids, and how cognitive overload builds in everyday high school life through nonstop task switching, homework demands across subjects, social stress, digital input, and constant performance pressure.
We also talk about the high achieving trap: perfectionism, self-imposed standards, and the fear loop that keeps teens pushing even when their internal resources are depleted.
You’ll leave with practical, parent-friendly strategies to reduce mental pressure without pretending deadlines don’t exist: breaking work into bite-sized steps, adding structure that makes tasks predictable, removing unnecessary decision-making, protecting true downtime so recovery can happen, and softening standards by giving permission to aim for good enough.
Most importantly, we reinforce a message teens need to hear: rest is not failure, and their worth is not measured by output.
If you know a parent who’s seeing these quiet signs, share this conversation with them. Subscribe for more support, and if it helps, leave a review so more families can find it.
Resources mentioned: The Teen Academic Success Blueprint
If you enjoyed today's episode, please take the time to rate our podcast. Your rating means the world to us and it allows us to continue to share and grow our message of support to other fabulous humans out there!
For more free resources, check out my guide to the 5 secret habits of teens who succeed. Jam packed with advice, tips and strategies. Yours free!
Follow us on:
Instagram
Facebook
Or visit our website: www.theclassichighschoolteacher.com
By The Classic High School TeacherSend us Fan Mail
Your teen can be getting good grades and still be running on empty.
If you’re seeing more “I don’t care” language, irritability over small things, procrastination that feels unlike them, or a kind of emotional flatness that wasn’t there before, it may not be attitude at all.
It may be quiet teen burnout, the kind that doesn’t look dramatic enough to trigger alarms but slowly wears a student down.
We break down what student burnout actually is, why it often hides in high-performing kids, and how cognitive overload builds in everyday high school life through nonstop task switching, homework demands across subjects, social stress, digital input, and constant performance pressure.
We also talk about the high achieving trap: perfectionism, self-imposed standards, and the fear loop that keeps teens pushing even when their internal resources are depleted.
You’ll leave with practical, parent-friendly strategies to reduce mental pressure without pretending deadlines don’t exist: breaking work into bite-sized steps, adding structure that makes tasks predictable, removing unnecessary decision-making, protecting true downtime so recovery can happen, and softening standards by giving permission to aim for good enough.
Most importantly, we reinforce a message teens need to hear: rest is not failure, and their worth is not measured by output.
If you know a parent who’s seeing these quiet signs, share this conversation with them. Subscribe for more support, and if it helps, leave a review so more families can find it.
Resources mentioned: The Teen Academic Success Blueprint
If you enjoyed today's episode, please take the time to rate our podcast. Your rating means the world to us and it allows us to continue to share and grow our message of support to other fabulous humans out there!
For more free resources, check out my guide to the 5 secret habits of teens who succeed. Jam packed with advice, tips and strategies. Yours free!
Follow us on:
Instagram
Facebook
Or visit our website: www.theclassichighschoolteacher.com