What sleep-related hormone is released 2–3 hours later in teens?
Melatonin
Teen melatonin release is delayed (a phenomenon called "sleep phase delay"), making them biologically wired to fall asleep later. Early school start times directly conflict with this cycle, worsening mood, attention, and learning.
These are common behaviors associated with anxiety
racing thoughts, recurring negative thoughts, sweaty palms, stomachaches, difficulty falling asleep
This is a common school outcome for students with low motivation
Failing Grades/Missing Assignments
What kind of memory holds information briefly during multitasking
Working memory
Working memory is the brain's mental “scratchpad.” It helps hold and manipulate information. Teen capacity is limited, and overload causes dropped steps, disorganization, and task abandonment.
This is the portal in which parents can check students' grades/missing assignments
Canvas/Skyward
What brain region finishes developing last and governs planning and impulse control?
Prefrontal cortex
The prefrontal cortex, which governs planning, inhibition, and working memory, continues developing into the mid-20s. This lag means teens are more reactive, less planful, and more susceptible to impulsivity, especially under emotional arousal.
What behavior tends to increase anxiety over time, even if it feels relieving short term?
Avoidance
Avoidance provides momentary relief but strengthens the fear network via negative reinforcement. The more a student avoids, the more threatening the task becomes neurologically and behaviorally
This neurotransmitter is key in reward anticipation and motivation
Dopamine
Depressed students often show blunted dopamine signaling. This impairs both motivation to begin tasks and the capacity to feel rewarded after completing them—a key target in behavioral activation.
What is an activity that provides large amounts of dopamine or feedback for very little effort?
Social Media (TikTok/Instagram reels)
This is a strategy to reduce anxiety in the moment
Mindfulness, deep breathing
What chemical drives novelty-seeking and goal pursuit in adolescents?
Dopamine
Dopamine is central to reward anticipation and learning. In adolescence, the dopaminergic system becomes hypersensitive, creating increased drive for novelty and instant gratification—but not necessarily better follow-through.
What brain structure misfires when teens interpret neutral situations as threats?
Amygdala
In anxiety, the amygdala mislabels neutral stimuli as threatening, triggering fight/flight. This leads to overreactions to school demands, peer feedback, or classroom dynamics.
These are tasks and activities that naturally regulate dopamine
Sufficient Sleep, Sunlight, Exercise
This is the type of memory that typically only lasts 20-30 seconds
Short-Term Memory
What is a parent’s best tool for increasing task follow-through at home?
Scaffolding/Prompting
Sometimes students need a jumpstart to get going doing the first assignment together or helping organize materials may provide the momentum needed to sustain effort through the rest of the task.
What emotional brain structure is hypersensitive in teens under stress?
Amygdala
The amygdala flags emotionally salient stimuli, especially threats. In teens, it’s hyperactive, and without full prefrontal regulation, they may overreact or shut down in emotionally charged situations.
Most students miss a few days per year, but what is it called when it becomes a pattern of avoidance
School refusal
When avoidance (like staying home) is followed by relief, the brain learns to repeat it. This reinforcement loop can make returning to school harder each day the student is out.
What’s the term for pairing a low-reward task with a high-reward activity?
Dopamine bundling
This behavioral strategy increases task initiation by creating anticipatory reward: e.g., only watching a favorite show while doing homework or folding laundry while listening to music.
What’s the term for choosing easy tasks to avoid the harder one?
Task substitution
Also known as "productive procrastination," this is a dopamine-preserving move. Teens often choose something rewarding but easy when the main task feels too hard to start.
What technique increases dopamine response by recognizing small wins?
Stacking- the formula for motivation is Anticipated Reward - Anticipated Effort. This means if students are expecting something good to happen as a result of doing a task they are more likely to do it in the future. By recognizing small wins this helps that equation.
These one of the three areas in the brain that are used in memory retention
Prefrontal Cortex, Basal Ganglia, Hippocampus
What form of exposure works best to reduce school-based avoidance?
Gradual exposure
Starting by attending school and utilizing counseling office or student services and slowly expand to classes.
What behavioral model explains the "do nothing → feel worse" depression loop
Activation cycle
Poor mood leads to not doing activities which leads to a poorer mood which leads to doing less.
This is how many items of information your brain can hold onto at once
7 (+ or - 2)
This strategy helps students reflect on strategies they are using that are allowing them to be successful
Insight Development