Your Child Is Falling Behind in School
Bad grades are a symptom, not the problem. Here is how to find and fix the root cause.
What Is Happening
The Situation
Your child's grades have slipped, their teacher has flagged concerns, or you have noticed they seem disconnected from school -- avoiding homework, expressing anxiety before tests, or simply telling you they hate going. This can happen gradually over months or appear to surface suddenly, but either way the pattern is clear: something is off. Whether this is a new development or a struggle that has been building for years, it is a solvable problem.
Why It Matters
Falling behind academically can create a compounding effect -- gaps in one subject make it harder to learn the next concept, confidence drops, and the child begins to see themselves as 'bad at school.' Intervening early is dramatically more effective than waiting. A child who gets the right support at the first sign of struggle has much better long-term outcomes than one whose difficulties are ignored until they become a crisis.
Common Triggers
- A new school year, new teacher, or switch to a different school that disrupted the child's routine
- An undiagnosed learning difference such as dyslexia, ADHD, or auditory processing disorder
- A social issue at school -- bullying, friendship problems, or social anxiety -- draining the child's mental energy
- A significant family change such as a move, divorce, new sibling, or the loss of a loved one
- A mismatch between the child's learning style and how material is being taught in class
- Vision or hearing problems that have not yet been identified or corrected
Your Action Plan
Open a Calm, Curious Conversation With Your Child
Before calling the school or signing up for tutoring, talk with your child -- not at them. Ask open-ended questions: 'What part of school feels the hardest right now?' or 'Is there anything that makes you not want to go?' Avoid framing the conversation around disappointment or blame, because children who feel shame tend to shut down. Your goal is to understand their experience, not to fix it on the spot.
Schedule a Meeting With the Teacher
Request a one-on-one meeting with your child's teacher -- not just a quick hallway conversation. Come prepared with specific observations from home: 'She spends two hours on homework that should take 30 minutes' or 'He says he doesn't understand fractions at all.' Ask the teacher what they are observing in class, whether the issue is isolated to one subject, and whether they have seen this pattern before. Teachers often have early insight into whether a child needs evaluation or just extra support.
Rule Out Physical and Sensory Issues
Before assuming the problem is academic or behavioral, have your child's vision and hearing checked if they have not been tested recently. Poor vision is an under-recognized cause of reading struggles, and hearing difficulties can affect comprehension and attention. A child with uncorrected vision sitting at the back of the classroom may appear inattentive when they simply cannot see the board.
Request a Formal School Evaluation
If academic struggles persist or are significant, you have the legal right to request a comprehensive educational evaluation through your school district at no cost to you. This is governed by the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). Submit your request in writing -- this starts a legally mandated timeline. The evaluation can assess cognitive ability, academic achievement, attention, language processing, and more. You do not need the teacher's permission to make this request.
Evaluate Whether a Learning Difference May Be Involved
Approximately 15-20% of the population has a learning difference such as dyslexia, dyscalculia, ADHD, or dysgraphia. These are not signs of low intelligence -- many highly successful people have them. If your child is working very hard but still struggling, if they are significantly better at some subjects than others, or if reading, writing, or math is disproportionately difficult, a learning difference evaluation is worth pursuing. You can request this through the school or privately through a neuropsychologist.
Build a Support Structure at Home
While evaluations and meetings proceed, create a consistent homework environment: same time, same place, minimal distractions. Break assignments into small chunks with short breaks. Praise effort and persistence rather than grades. Work with your child to understand which subjects feel hardest and why -- then ask the teacher or a tutor to address specific gaps, not just help with daily homework.
Explore Tutoring, Intervention Services, and Accommodations
If your child qualifies for special education services, the school must provide them at no cost through an Individualized Education Program (IEP). If they do not qualify for an IEP but still need support, a 504 Plan can provide accommodations such as extended test time, preferred seating, and printed notes. Private tutoring can also fill gaps, but match the tutor to the specific need -- a reading specialist for dyslexia, a math interventionist for dyscalculia, rather than a generic academic tutor.
Monitor Progress and Adjust the Plan
Intervention plans need to be revisited every 4-6 weeks to see if they are working. Track not just grades but also your child's confidence, their willingness to engage with schoolwork, and how long homework is taking. If a tutor is not producing results after 8 weeks, try a different approach. If the school is not delivering the services in the IEP, that is a compliance issue you have the right to raise formally.
Key Questions to Ask
Is my child struggling in all subjects or just specific ones?
Subject-specific struggles often point to a skill gap, a learning difference in that domain (like dyscalculia for math), or a specific teacher relationship issue. Broad struggles across all subjects more often suggest attention difficulties, anxiety, a significant life stressor, or a general processing issue. The pattern tells you where to look first.
The education copilot can help you map your child's performance across subjects over time to identify patterns and likely root causes before you spend money on evaluations or interventions.
Could anxiety or mental health issues be the real driver?
Academic anxiety, generalized anxiety disorder, depression, and trauma can all manifest as academic failure. A child who is anxious about tests may freeze during exams even when they know the material. A depressed child may lack the energy and motivation to complete work. If your child also shows signs of physical symptoms before school (stomachaches, headaches), avoidance, or mood changes, the underlying issue may be emotional rather than academic.
The mental health copilot can help you identify signs that anxiety or depression may be contributing to academic struggles and guide you toward the right type of professional to see -- school counselor, therapist, or child psychiatrist.
What does my child's school legally owe them if they have a learning difference?
Under IDEA, public schools are required to provide a free appropriate public education (FAPE) to all eligible students with disabilities, including learning differences. Schools sometimes resist evaluating students or providing services due to resource constraints. Knowing your rights means you can advocate effectively and escalate if the school is not meeting its legal obligations.
The education copilot can explain the IDEA evaluation process, your rights at each step, what timelines the school must follow, and what to do if the school denies your request for evaluation or services.
Is the issue the teacher, the school, or the curriculum?
Not every child thrives with every teaching style, and some schools are simply better equipped to support struggling learners than others. If your child did well in previous years and declined with a specific teacher, a teaching style mismatch may be part of the issue. If the school lacks intervention resources or special education staff, a school transfer or supplemental private support may be necessary.
The education copilot can help you evaluate whether your child's school has the resources to meet their needs, and research alternative options including magnet schools, charter schools, or private schools with strong learning support programs.
Should I consider tutoring, and if so, what kind?
Generic tutoring -- having someone sit with your child and help with nightly homework -- rarely solves the underlying problem. Effective tutoring targets specific skill gaps using evidence-based methods. For a child with dyslexia, that means structured literacy (Orton-Gillingham or Wilson Reading). For a child with math gaps, it means finding where understanding broke down and rebuilding from that point. Choosing the wrong tutor wastes money and time.
The education copilot can help you identify the type of tutoring your child actually needs based on their specific struggles and learning profile, and ask the right questions when interviewing potential tutors.
When to See a Professional
Definitely Hire a Pro
- Your child has been evaluated and qualifies for special education services, but the school is not providing them as written in the IEP
- Your child shows signs of significant anxiety, depression, or trauma that appears to be driving academic difficulties
- Struggles have persisted for more than one school year across multiple teachers and approaches
- You suspect a learning difference but the school has refused to conduct an evaluation
- Your child is significantly behind grade level in reading by the end of second grade
Probably Worth It
- Academic struggles began suddenly after a significant life event (divorce, move, loss)
- Your child is working much harder than peers but still falling behind
- Teachers have expressed concern and recommended outside evaluation or support
- Your child is developing school avoidance -- physical symptoms, refusal, intense distress
- Tutoring has not produced results after 8-12 weeks
You Can Likely Handle It
- The struggle is limited to a single difficult subject and the school is already providing extra help
- Grades slipped during a chaotic period (illness, family stress) but are recovering on their own
- Your child is at grade level but you are comparing them to an above-average peer group
- The child expresses interest in school and the issue is primarily organizational rather than academic
- A simple routine change at home (better sleep, reduced screen time) has already produced improvement
Key Facts
Finding the Root Cause: Why Grades Are Just a Signal
When a child's grades drop, the instinct is to treat the symptom -- add homework time, hire a tutor, restrict video games. But grades are a signal, not the problem itself. The real work is figuring out why the signal is flashing. The cause could be academic (a foundational skill gap), neurological (an undiagnosed learning difference), emotional (anxiety, depression, social struggles), physical (vision, hearing, sleep), environmental (a difficult classroom dynamic), or some combination.
Start by observing without judgment. How long does homework actually take? Which subjects cause the most frustration? Does your child engage differently with reading versus math? Do they seem tired, anxious, or sad? Are they having trouble with friends? These observations are diagnostic data. The education copilot can help you organize your observations into a structured picture that points toward the most likely root cause.
One of the most important distinctions is between a child who is not trying and a child who is trying hard and still failing. The latter is a much stronger signal that something structural -- a learning difference, a skill gap, an attention issue -- is getting in the way. Children who are trying hard and not succeeding are not lazy; they are often exhausted and demoralized, and they need diagnosis and support, not more pressure.
Resist the urge to jump straight to tutoring before you understand the problem. Hiring a math tutor when the real issue is ADHD-driven inability to sustain attention during homework is like mopping the floor while the pipe is still leaking. Understand the root cause first, then build the right support structure around it.
How to Work Effectively With Teachers and School Staff
Parents who approach the school as partners -- rather than adversaries or passive bystanders -- tend to get better outcomes for their children. Come to teacher meetings prepared, curious, and solution-focused. Share what you observe at home. Ask what the teacher observes in the classroom. Ask what has worked for similar students. Make it collaborative.
Keep written records of every meeting and conversation. Send a follow-up email after each meeting: 'Thank you for meeting with me today. My understanding of the action steps is...' This creates accountability and a paper trail if things escalate later. If your child has an IEP or 504 Plan, get a copy of every version and review it carefully -- schools are legally required to implement what is written in these documents.
If you feel the school is not responding adequately, escalate politely but firmly. Move from the classroom teacher to the school's special education coordinator, then to the principal, and if needed, to the district's special education director. Frame your requests around your child's legal rights rather than personal frustration. The education copilot can help you draft letters that are firm, factual, and professionally worded at each stage of escalation.
Know that you have the right under IDEA to request an independent educational evaluation (IEE) at the school district's expense if you disagree with the district's evaluation results. You also have the right to bring an advocate or attorney to any IEP meeting. Schools are required to inform you of these rights but do not always proactively explain them.
Learning Differences: What Parents Need to Know
Dyslexia affects approximately 15-20% of the population and is the most common learning difference. It is a language processing issue -- not a vision problem -- that affects reading fluency, spelling, and phonological awareness. Children with dyslexia are often smart and creative but struggle intensely with reading and written expression. The earlier it is identified and treated with structured literacy instruction, the better the outcome. According to the National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, early structured literacy intervention produces the strongest long-term reading outcomes for children with dyslexia.
ADHD affects approximately 9% of children and is characterized by difficulty sustaining attention, impulse control challenges, and sometimes hyperactivity. In school, this can manifest as incomplete work, forgotten assignments, difficulty starting tasks, or seemingly not listening to instructions. Girls with ADHD are frequently missed because they often present with inattentive (rather than hyperactive) symptoms. ADHD is highly treatable through a combination of behavioral strategies, environmental accommodations, and -- in many cases -- medication. The CDC's ADHD treatment resource outlines the evidence-based approaches recommended for children across different age groups.
Dyscalculia is a math-specific learning difference affecting number sense and mathematical reasoning. Dysgraphia affects writing -- not just handwriting, but the physical process of forming letters and the cognitive load of producing written text. Auditory processing disorder means the brain has difficulty interpreting what the ears hear, even when hearing test results are normal. Each of these conditions has specific, evidence-based interventions that work. The education copilot can walk you through the signs of each and help you decide which type of evaluation makes the most sense for your child. You may also find our guide to early dyslexia signs parents overlook helpful before the first school meeting.
If your child is diagnosed with a learning difference, reframe it: they do not have a broken brain, they have a brain that works differently. Many of history's most innovative thinkers -- including many entrepreneurs, scientists, and artists -- had learning differences. The goal is to find the tools and strategies that let their brain work with its strengths rather than against its challenges. See also our resources for parents navigating the special education system.
IEPs, 504 Plans, and Your Rights as a Parent
If your child has a disability that affects their ability to access education, federal law provides two primary frameworks for support. An Individualized Education Program (IEP) is the more robust option -- it provides specialized instruction, related services (speech therapy, occupational therapy, counseling), and accommodations tailored to your child's specific needs. To qualify, your child must have a disability that adversely affects educational performance in one of 13 specific categories under IDEA. The U.S. Department of Education's IDEA website provides the full text of the law along with parent rights guides in multiple languages.
A 504 Plan, under Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, provides accommodations without specialized instruction for students whose disability affects a major life activity (including learning). Common accommodations include extended time on tests, preferential seating, reduced homework load, access to notes, and assistive technology. 504 Plans are generally easier to qualify for and faster to put in place than IEPs. They do not provide the same level of services but can be enormously helpful for students who need a level playing field rather than specialized instruction.
As a parent, you have the right to participate in every IEP meeting, to review all evaluation data, to disagree with the school's eligibility determination, and to request an independent evaluation if you disagree with the school's evaluation. You also have the right to request mediation or a due process hearing if disputes cannot be resolved. These protections exist because history has shown that without them, schools sometimes fail to provide eligible students with the support they are legally entitled to. If your child's struggles are also affecting their emotional wellbeing, see our scenario on helping children process school anxiety alongside the academic interventions.
If you are navigating a complex IEP situation, consider hiring a parent advocate. Parent advocates are trained in special education law and can attend IEP meetings with you, help you understand what to request, and push back when the school is not meeting its obligations. They typically charge $50-$200 per hour -- significantly less than an attorney -- and can dramatically change the outcome of an IEP meeting. The education copilot can help you understand what to expect at each step and prepare for IEP meetings so you go in informed and confident. Our step-by-step IEP evaluation request guide also covers the written request process in detail.
The Emotional Impact on Your Child -- and How to Help
Children who struggle academically often internalize the experience as a reflection of their worth and intelligence. 'I'm dumb' is a conclusion many children reach when they work hard and still fail. This belief can become self-fulfilling: a child who believes they cannot succeed stops trying to avoid the pain of failing again. This is not character weakness -- it is a very human response to repeated failure in a high-stakes environment.
Your job as a parent is to be the consistent voice that separates effort from outcome and ability from performance. 'You worked really hard on that, and I saw how much you tried' is more powerful than 'Great job!' Praise the process. Acknowledge the struggle honestly rather than dismissing it. When your child says 'I'm stupid,' don't just say 'No you're not' -- say 'It feels that way right now. What part is hardest? Let's figure it out together.'
Look for contexts where your child experiences competence and success outside of academics -- sports, art, music, building things, cooking, caring for animals. These experiences rebuild the confidence that school struggles erode. A child who knows they are capable of mastering something hard in one domain can transfer that self-belief to academic challenges.
If your child is showing signs of significant anxiety, school refusal, or depression, do not wait for grades to improve to address the emotional side. These are often more urgent than the academic issue itself. School counselors can be a helpful first resource, and child therapists specializing in anxiety or learning differences can make a significant difference. The mental health copilot can help you identify warning signs that warrant professional support and what type of help is most appropriate for your child's situation.
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