The Pressure Of Modern Learning

In South Africa’s education system, learners face unprecedented pressure but often lack the means to cope.

We explore the growing pressure facing South African learners as they navigate academic demands, social stress, digital distraction and uncertainty about the future.

What was once a manageable academic journey has become a constant juggling and balancing act in a challenging environment.

According to the World Health Organization, one in seven young people aged 10 to 19 lives with a mental disorder, most commonly anxiety and depression. These challenges are not separate from the classroom. They are increasingly influencing concentration, confidence and engagement.

In South Africa, the South African Depression and Anxiety Group (SADAG) estimates up to one in five teenagers experience anxiety or depression, which often appears not as a visible crisis, but as withdrawal, avoidance of certain subjects or quiet decline despite ability.

“This is no longer about whether learners are capable,” says Clive Robinson, founder of Tutor Doctor South Africa. “We are seeing learners who have the ability, but not the capacity to manage the pressure around them.” This shift highlights how pressure can become counterproductive rather than motivating.

when pressure turns counterproductive

While stress can motivate, constant pressure undermines focus and confidence, leading to avoidance and widening gaps in understanding. This cycle of pressure and underperformance reinforces itself over time.

The signs are often subtle. Changes in mood, disrupted sleep, reduced participation, or a drop in engagement can all indicate that a learner is struggling.

By the time marks begin to fall, the issue is rarely just academic. Unmanaged pressure compounds over time, making it harder to recover and rebuild confidence.

Early intervention is critical. Creating environments where learners feel safe to ask for help can prevent short-term challenges from becoming long-term setbacks.

rebuilding confidence, not just results

Sustained pressure changes learners’ self-perception. Difficulty is often seen as an inability, reinforcing disengagement. Shifting this mindset is key. Learners need to understand that ability develops over time, and struggling is part of the process.

Often, accumulated gaps in understanding drive pressure. One-to-one support can help learners regain confidence and re-engage.

a growing support gap at home

This pressure does not exist in isolation. Many households are under increasing strain, with rising living costs and longer working hours leaving parents with less time and capacity to provide consistent academic support.

The result is a widening support gap: learners must achieve highly, but support systems at home and school are stretched.

what support looks like

Parents, tutors and caregivers play a critical role. Consider these practical ways to offer support:

  • Create space for open, judgement-free conversation.
  • Focus on progress rather than perfection.
  • Build balanced routines that include rest.
  • Break tasks into manageable steps.
  • Watch for behavioural changes.
  • Act early when challenges arise.

preparing for what comes next

The transition to tertiary education requires greater independence and academic resilience. Many learners struggle to adapt without effective stress management.

Resilience is built over time through consistent support and the opportunity to rebuild confidence along the way.

Read our articles on teaching resilience, here and here.

redefining success

Academic success and mental wellbeing cannot be separated. If learners are expected to perform, they must also be equipped to cope.

In today’s learning environment, resilience is no longer a soft skill; it is a requirement.

 

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