By Kavita Kerawalla, Vice Chairperson, VIBGYOR Group of Schools
Every year, board exam results dominate headlines and dinner table conversations. Marks become shorthand for merit, potential, and even character. Yet, beyond the scorecards lies a quieter, heavier reality that students carry pressures that no report card can capture. Academic performance is only the visible tip of a much deeper emotional, social, and psychological burden.
The Weight of Expectations
For many students, the pressure begins long before they enter the examination hall. Expectations from parents, teachers, and society often turn education into a high-stakes performance. A nationwide survey by NCERT found that 81% of students experience acute anxiety related to studies, exams, and results.
This anxiety is rarely about one exam alone. It reflects a broader fear: disappointing loved ones, losing social standing, or missing out on future opportunities. When approval becomes tied to marks, self-worth can shrink to a number.
Social Expectations and Family Pressures
Cultural and familial expectations can compound academic stress. In many homes, board results are discussed almost like a verdict on a child’s potential. While support and encouragement are invaluable, an overemphasis on grades can make students equate their self-worth with academic performance.
Parents may unintentionally amplify this pressure when they talk about future careers, college choices, or comparisons with siblings and friends. Students internalise these conversations, often masking their anxiety to avoid disappointing their families.
The Silent Contributors
Academic pressure does not exist in isolation. Modern student life introduces additional stressors — excessive screen time, sleep deprivation, and uncertainty about careers. A national student well-being report found that three-quarters of Grade 12 students get fewer than seven hours of sleep, often due to academic workload and late-night social media use.
Sleep deprivation affects concentration, emotional regulation, and resilience. Combined with constant online comparison and fear of falling behind, students can feel trapped in a cycle of exhaustion and self-doubt.
The Loneliness Behind Competition
Competitive academic environments often discourage vulnerability. Students may hesitate to share struggles, fearing they will appear weak or less capable. This isolation intensifies stress.
Research highlights that loneliness and lack of support systems are major contributors to student distress, with many relying only on peers or internal coping rather than seeking professional help.
When students feel they must endure pressure silently, emotional fatigue deepens.
When Stress Becomes Dangerous
The consequences of unchecked academic pressure can be severe. According to national crime data, over 13,044 students died by suicide in India in 2022, with exam failure cited as a contributing factor in many cases.
Behind each statistic is a young life overwhelmed by expectations and a lack of emotional support. These tragedies underscore that academic stress is not merely a motivational tool — it can become a mental health crisis.
Bullying, Identity and Peer Pressure
Academic stress is only one part of a student’s reality. Many also navigate peer pressure, bullying, and the constant need to fit in. Casual remarks about marks, appearance, or background can leave a lasting emotional impact. Social media often magnifies comparison and exclusion, making students feel judged even outside school hours.
At the same time, adolescence is a period of identity formation. When marks become the primary measure of worth, those who feel different may withdraw or doubt themselves. Academic disappointment combined with social struggles can deepen self-doubt. Understanding these overlapping pressures helps us see students not just as performers, but as individuals seeking acceptance and belonging.
Towards Supportive Change
Addressing these hidden pressures requires collective recognition and action:
1. Open Conversations at Home: Encouraging honest discussions about stress, expectations, and goals helps students feel seen and supported rather than judged.
2. Structured Counselling in Schools: Systematic access to trained counsellors can equip students with coping strategies and early intervention when needed.
3. Emphasis on Life Skills: Teaching emotional regulation, time management, and stress resilience prepares students for challenges beyond exams.
4. Community Awareness: Reducing stigma around mental health and normalising help-seeking behaviour can transform how students experience pressure.
Conclusion
Academic results matter, but not at the expense of emotional well-being. Students carry many pressures beyond test scores: dreams, fears, social expectations, sleep debt, and the quest for identity. Recognising and addressing these unspoken burdens is crucial to helping young people grow not just as learners, but as resilient, balanced individuals. If we widen our lens beyond marks, we see students not merely as carriers of grades but as human beings deserving empathy, support, and space to thrive.