Close Menu
RadiowavesRadiowaves
  • Homepage
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • About Us
  • Disclaimer
  • News
  • Schools
  • Trending

The Parents Rights Law That Has Schools Terrified of Their Own Curricula

June 8, 2026

The Quiet Epidemic of Anxiety in American High Schools — and the Districts That Are Actually Doing Something About It

June 8, 2026

Ratcliffe College – The Hidden Gem of English Education That Parents Are Quietly Obsessing Over

June 8, 2026

Exeter University Open Days 2026 – Everything You Need to Know Before You Book

June 8, 2026
RadiowavesRadiowaves
Subscribe Login
  • Homepage
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • About Us
  • Disclaimer
  • News
  • Schools
  • Trending
RadiowavesRadiowaves
Home » The Quiet Epidemic of Anxiety in American High Schools — and the Districts That Are Actually Doing Something About It
News

The Quiet Epidemic of Anxiety in American High Schools — and the Districts That Are Actually Doing Something About It

Jerry LegerBy Jerry LegerJune 8, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp VKontakte Email
The Quiet Epidemic of Anxiety in American High Schools — and the Districts That Are Actually Doing Something About It
The Quiet Epidemic of Anxiety in American High Schools — and the Districts That Are Actually Doing Something About It
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Something seems a little strange when you stroll through the hallways of practically any American high school on a Tuesday morning. It’s just a low, constant hum of tiredness, neither dramatic nor obvious. In between classes, students are glued to their phones, their shoulders taut, and they move with a mechanical efficiency that belies their sixteen years of age. It’s possible that the majority of adults pass it without giving it any thought. However, it is now impossible to ignore the numbers.

Approximately 85% of students in the 1950s scored lower on anxiety tests than the average American high school student today. Take a moment to sit with that. Compared to the overall student body of a time when polio outbreaks and Cold War drills were commonplace, rather than to some anomalous group. Approximately 25% of teenagers suffer from anxiety disorders, a number that has increased steadily over the past three decades and doesn’t appear to be leveling off. Across the nation, school psychologists, teachers, and counselors are watching this develop and, in many cases, feeling genuinely unprepared for what’s coming.

The Quiet Epidemic of Anxiety in American High Schools — and the Districts That Are Actually Doing Something About It
The Quiet Epidemic of Anxiety in American High Schools — and the Districts That Are Actually Doing Something About It

Teachers believe the change has been slow enough to become the norm. Every year is a little worse than the last, and every graduating class has a little more weight than the previous one. Many students have simply run out of steam by high school, whether it be emotionally, socially, or academically. Early on, the pressure builds up. For many teenagers, there is no true off switch due to increased testing frequency, increased competition for college placement, and a blurring of the boundaries between school life and digital life. Their phones, bedrooms, and homes are all affected by the anxiety.

Growing family instability, increased academic expectations, and the growth of psychological vocabulary that has made it easier to name the feeling—though naming it hasn’t necessarily meant treating it—are some of the compounding factors that researchers tracing this history point to. A 21-year-old mental health advocate who struggled with extreme anxiety during his first semester of college talked about holding everything inside for months before finally losing it in a counselor’s office. “It was a huge relief,” he said. That is not an uncommon tale. It may be the most prevalent narrative in American education at the moment.

The success stories are more difficult to locate, but they do exist. A few districts across the nation have discreetly begun constructing real infrastructure, going beyond awareness campaigns. Instead of waiting for crises to worsen, Connecticut, for example, developed a model that places child-behavior specialists right into failing schools. Based on the idea that diagnosing anxiety at age four is preferable to treating it at age seventeen, some districts are experimenting with early mental health screenings well before kindergarten. It’s still unclear whether the political will endures, whether these interventions scale, and whether they endure budget cycles.

Hard not to notice, though, that the schools doing something share a common thread: they stopped treating mental health as a sidebar to academic performance and started treating it as the foundation beneath everything else. That reframing sounds simple. In practice, given how American schools are funded and evaluated, it’s genuinely difficult.

The epidemic isn’t quiet because students are hiding it. The institutions that surround them have been slow to pay attention, which is why it’s quiet. Now some people are paying attention. The more unsettling question is still whether that’s sufficient and whether it’s timely.

Anxiety Epidemic
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp Email
Previous ArticleRatcliffe College – The Hidden Gem of English Education That Parents Are Quietly Obsessing Over
Next Article The Parents Rights Law That Has Schools Terrified of Their Own Curricula
Jerry Leger

    Jerry Leger is a full-time online writer and Senior Editor at radiowaves.co.uk, where he covers the latest research and developments across education, schools, colleges, and the world of sports. With a sharp eye for innovation and a genuine curiosity about how learning evolves, Jerry brings depth and clarity to topics that matter most to students, educators, and parents alike. Jerry writes with the kind of passion that only comes from genuinely caring about the subject, covering everything from curriculum changes and classroom policies to innovative school initiatives and the tales of athletic success. His work is easily readable and well-researched, whether he is dissecting the most recent findings in education or examining how innovation is changing the way we teach and learn.

    Related Posts

    The Parents Rights Law That Has Schools Terrified of Their Own Curricula

    June 8, 2026

    Exeter University Open Days 2026 – Everything You Need to Know Before You Book

    June 8, 2026

    Bristol University Open Days Are Back — And This Time, You Really Don’t Want to Miss Them

    June 8, 2026

    The Deficit Drama: Inside the Bitter State Battles Over Revised Education Budgets

    June 5, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.

    Don't Miss
    News

    The Parents Rights Law That Has Schools Terrified of Their Own Curricula

    By Jerry LegerJune 8, 20260

    Recently, a certain type of anxiety has taken hold in American public schools; it’s not…

    The Quiet Epidemic of Anxiety in American High Schools — and the Districts That Are Actually Doing Something About It

    June 8, 2026

    Ratcliffe College – The Hidden Gem of English Education That Parents Are Quietly Obsessing Over

    June 8, 2026

    Exeter University Open Days 2026 – Everything You Need to Know Before You Book

    June 8, 2026

    Lamar University Is Growing Faster Than Anyone Expected — Here’s Why That Matters

    June 8, 2026

    San Jose Unified School District Is Closing 5 Schools — And Parents Are Furious

    June 8, 2026

    Bristol University Open Days Are Back — And This Time, You Really Don’t Want to Miss Them

    June 8, 2026
    About Us
    About Us

    Radiowaves is the UK's trusted safe digital publishing platform for schools, built specifically to help children and young people report on their world through podcasts, video, and blogs. We believe every young person has a story worth telling — and we exist to make sure they can tell it safely.
    Whether it's covering a local sports day, exploring science at school, reporting on wildlife and the environment, or sharing creative work with the world, Radiowaves gives students the tools, the platform, and the confidence to become real reporters.

    Safe student publishing — podcasts, videos, blogs, and news stories, all moderated before going live
    A global network of young reporters — students connect with peers across the UK and around the world
    Curriculum-linked projects and competitions — exclusive opportunities that bring learning to life
    Teacher and parent confidence — every piece of content passes through safeguarding protocols before it is published

    Our platform is used by primary and secondary schools, and our content spans news, education, science, sport, the environment, music, and local community stories.

    Our Picks

    The Parents Rights Law That Has Schools Terrified of Their Own Curricula

    June 8, 2026

    The Quiet Epidemic of Anxiety in American High Schools — and the Districts That Are Actually Doing Something About It

    June 8, 2026

    Ratcliffe College – The Hidden Gem of English Education That Parents Are Quietly Obsessing Over

    June 8, 2026
    Disclaimer

    Radiowaves is a publishing platform for education. Nothing on this website should be interpreted as professional advice of any kind, including information about science, health, finance, economics, current affairs, or local news. Specifically, nothing on radiowaves.co.uk qualifies as tax advice, investment advice, financial advice, or any other type of regulated financial service. The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) has neither authorized nor regulated Radiowaves Schools Ltd. Student reporters’ coverage of financial issues is solely intended for informational and educational purposes. Before making any financial decisions, readers should always speak with a qualified financial expert.
    The content of any external websites that are linked from this platform is not the responsibility of Radiowaves. An external link does not imply support for that website, its content, or its proprietors.
    Parents and guardians are encouraged to monitor their children’s online activity and report any concerns to their school or directly to Radiowaves via our Contact page, even though every effort is made to ensure the platform is safe for young users.

    The Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) or any other financial regulatory body in the UK or abroad has neither authorized nor regulated Radiowaves Schools Ltd. as a financial institution. When making financial decisions for oneself, a business, or an investment, nothing on this website should be trusted.
    Please speak with an independent financial advisor who is fully authorized and subject to FCA regulation if you need financial advice.

    • Homepage
    • Contact
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms of Service
    • About Us
    • Disclaimer
    • News
    • Schools
    • Trending
    © 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Sign In or Register

    Welcome Back!

    Login to your account below.

    Lost password?