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Child & Adolescent Psychiatry

Why College Feels So Hard and What Helps

February 26, 2026 3 mins read

The transition to college represents a significant developmental shift. Students are managing increased academic rigor alongside new independence and adult responsibilities. Even bright, capable students can find that their focus and motivation feel unexpectedly strained.

In most cases, the issue is not intelligence. It is the level of executive functioning required.

College coursework demands sustained attention, independent planning, organization of long-term assignments, and the ability to study strategically without external reminders. Professors provide less structure. Deadlines are fewer but carry greater weight. Students must pace themselves, monitor their own understanding, and adjust when they fall behind.

At the same time, students are managing sleep, meals, finances, social relationships, work schedules, and daily logistics. These competing demands tax cognitive and emotional resources. When executive systems are overloaded, focus and follow-through often decline first.

For students with ADHD, learning disorders, or social communication differences, the reduced structure of college can magnify longstanding vulnerabilities. Difficulties with task initiation, procrastination, time management, reading efficiency, written expression, or processing speed may become more apparent.

Student mental health also plays a significant role. Anxiety can interfere with concentration and increase avoidance. Depression reduces cognitive energy and motivation. Chronic stress and inconsistent sleep impair attention and memory. For some students, college is the first time these symptoms become clinically significant.

A decline in motivation is frequently misinterpreted as laziness or a lack of effort. More commonly, it reflects difficulty with initiation, planning, emotional regulation, or untreated mood symptoms. When students feel overwhelmed or unsure how to begin, avoidance becomes a short-term coping strategy that ultimately increases stress.

Practical Strategies to Support Academic Focus

While each student’s needs are different, the following strategies are consistently helpful:

Externalize organization.

Use a structured system to track assignments and deadlines. This may include a digital calendar, planner, or task management app. Large assignments should be broken into smaller, clearly defined steps with specific target dates. Relying on memory alone increases cognitive load and reduces efficiency.

Schedule work proactively.

Rather than waiting for motivation, assign study blocks to specific days and times. Treat these blocks as standing commitments. Predictable routines reduce the mental effort required to initiate tasks.

Use active study methods.

Re-reading notes is rarely sufficient. Stronger strategies include self-testing, summarizing material without looking at notes, creating outlines from memory, teaching concepts aloud, and completing practice problems. Active engagement improves retention and reduces last-minute cramming.

Create a low-distraction environment.

Silence notifications. Use website blockers if needed. Keep only essential materials visible during study periods. For students who struggle with initiation, short, structured intervals of focused work followed by brief breaks can increase momentum.

Protect sleep and daily structure.

Sleep deprivation significantly impairs attention, processing speed, and emotional regulation. Consistent sleep and wake times, regular meals, and predictable daily rhythms provide a foundation for cognitive functioning.

Monitor mental health.

Persistent worry, low mood, irritability, loss of motivation, or difficulty concentrating may signal anxiety or depression rather than poor work habits. Early intervention through counseling or therapy can prevent academic decline.

Utilize campus supports.

Writing centers, tutoring services, disability support offices, and academic coaching programs are designed to help students succeed. Office hours with professors can clarify expectations and reduce uncertainty.

Consider targeted support.

Therapy can address anxiety, depression, trauma, or adjustment challenges. Executive

functioning coaching can help students build systems for organization, planning, and follow-through. For some students, medication management may also be part of appropriate treatment.

When More Clarity Is Needed

If difficulties with focus, organization, or emotional regulation are persistent, longstanding, or disproportionately impairing, it may be helpful to evaluate underlying contributors.

A comprehensive neuropsychological evaluation assesses intellectual ability, attention, executive functioning, academic achievement, learning and memory, processing speed, and emotional functioning. This type of assessment does more than determine whether a diagnosis is present. It clarifies how a student learns, where inefficiencies occur, and which interventions are most likely to be effective.

From there, recommendations can be tailored with specificity, whether that includes academic accommodations, structured supports, therapy, or targeted skill development.

College is demanding because it requires sustained self-management at a level many students are still developing. With accurate understanding and appropriate support, students can strengthen these skills and move forward with greater confidence and stability.

About the Author
Sarah Friedman avatar

Sarah Friedman

Director of Neuropsychology & Psychological Assessments

Sarah Friedman, Psy.D., is a clinical neuropsychologist and the Director of Neuropsychology & Psychological Assessments at Rittenhouse Psychiatric Associates. She provides neuropsychological testing and cognitive-behavioral therapy to help children, adolescents, and adults better understand how they think, learn, and manage daily challenges.

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