7 July, 2026
Your kid was fine in middle school. Not perfect, maybe a little scattered, but fine. Grades were okay, homework mostly happened, nobody was failing anything.
Then high school started, and something shifted. Missing assignments. A 2 a.m. text about a project due tomorrow that they “totally forgot” was assigned three weeks ago. A GPA that doesn’t match the kid you know — the one who can explain the entire plot of a show in painstaking detail, or spend four hours perfecting a highlight reel, but somehow can’t seem to start a five-paragraph essay before the night it’s due.
If you’re reading this at 11 p.m. after another homework standoff, wondering what changed — you’re not the only parent asking, and it’s very likely not the explanation you’re worried it is (laziness, apathy, “just doesn’t care about school anymore”). Something structural changed. Let’s talk about what it actually is.
Here’s the thing nobody quite prepares you for: high school assumes a level of independence that most freshmen simply haven’t built yet, and then treats the gap between “assumed” and “actual” as a character issue.
Middle school, whatever its flaws, still checked in. High school mostly doesn’t. Four or five classes with four or five entirely different systems — one teacher lives in Google Classroom, another hands out a paper syllabus in September and never mentions it again, a third assumes you’re checking a portal daily. Multiply that by AP-track pressure, extracurriculars that suddenly matter for college apps, a much bigger building, and a schedule that rotates in ways middle school never did — and you get a level of executive demand that jumps enormously in a single semester, while the skills to manage it are expected to have just… arrived. They usually haven’t. Not because your teen is behind, but because those planning, prioritizing, and self-tracking skills develop on their own timeline, and high school doesn’t wait for them.
A few patterns show up again and again in teens dealing with this kind of gap, and it’s worth naming them plainly, because from the outside they can look like six different problems instead of one:
None of this is a motivation problem dressed up as an executive function problem. It’s usually the reverse — a real skills gap that looks like low motivation from the outside, because a kid who’s overwhelmed and doesn’t know where to start often just… doesn’t start, and “doesn’t start” reads as “doesn’t care” even when the opposite is true.
There’s a version of this struggle that’s unique to high school and doesn’t exist in middle school: the awareness, however dim, that this now counts. GPA. Transcripts. The looming idea of college applications, even freshman year, even when nobody’s said the word “college” out loud yet this week. That pressure doesn’t motivate a kid with an executive function gap into suddenly developing planning skills — it usually does the opposite, adding a layer of anxiety on top of an already-overloaded system, which makes starting things even harder, not easier.
This is worth sitting with for a second, because it’s counterintuitive: raising the stakes on a kid who’s already struggling with the process of managing work rarely produces more effort. It often produces more avoidance. The stakes were never the missing ingredient.
Taking away the phone until grades improve. More check-ins. A stricter homework schedule enforced by a parent standing over a shoulder. None of these are unreasonable to try, and most parents try some version of all three — but they tend to produce short bursts of compliance followed by the exact same pattern a few weeks later, because they’re consequences layered on top of a skill that was never actually taught. A teenager doesn’t learn to break down a research paper into steps by losing screen time; they learn it by practicing the actual planning, out loud, with someone, enough times that it starts to become automatic.
Executive functioning coaching for high school students is built around exactly this — not tutoring the subject matter, but coaching the process underneath it, in weekly sessions tied to a student’s actual classes and actual deadlines, not a generic worksheet.
Sometimes it’s genuinely just high school being harder than middle school, for every kid, full stop. But if this pattern has been consistent for years rather than new this fall — if it tracks back to elementary school struggles that never fully resolved, or if there’s a family history of ADHD — it’s worth a conversation with a pediatrician or licensed evaluator about what’s underneath it. ADHD symptoms often shift in adolescence, showing up less as visible hyperactivity and more as exactly this kind of executive dysfunction — missed deadlines, disorganization, a gap between ability and output.
Anxiety can produce a strikingly similar picture, too — a teen who’s so overwhelmed by a task that avoiding it becomes the path of least resistance, which then creates more anxiety about the growing pile of undone work. The link between anxiety and procrastination in teens is well documented, and the two often show up tangled together rather than as separate, tidy diagnoses.
None of this requires a diagnosis before you act, though. Executive function coaching helps whether or not there’s a formal evaluation on the calendar — the skills gap is real either way, and it doesn’t need a label to start closing.
It’s easy to focus entirely on the transcript, because that’s the part with numbers attached to it. But talk to enough families going through this and a second cost shows up just as often: the relationship. Every conversation starts to be about homework. Every car ride turns into a check-in. A parent becomes a full-time deadline enforcer for a job they never signed up for, and a teenager starts to feel like their whole relationship with mom or dad has been reduced to nagging about an essay.
That’s often the quiet reason outside support makes such a difference — not just the organizational skills themselves, but getting a parent out of the enforcer role entirely, so the relationship gets to be about something other than missing assignments again.
A rough freshman or sophomore year doesn’t define the rest of high school, and it definitely doesn’t define college. What it usually means is that a teen hit the edge of skills that were never explicitly taught, at the exact moment those skills suddenly mattered a lot more. Building those skills now, while there’s still time before the leap to college independence, tends to pay off far beyond just this semester’s grades — it’s the same planning, prioritizing, and self-tracking ability that has to carry a young adult through a dorm room with nobody checking in on them at all.
If homework has become the main thing your family fights about, that’s worth taking seriously — not as a discipline problem, but as a signal that your teen is missing a specific, learnable skill set, at a moment when learning it actually matters. The good news: it’s learnable, and the sooner it gets addressed directly, the less of high school it eats up along the way.
If you’re ready for some outside help with this, we’d love to talk about how we can support your high schooler.
To learn more about the programs offered by Peak Academic Coaching, visit our Academic Coaching and Executive Functioning Skills Coach pages. We also specialize in academic coaching for students with ADHD.
Wednesday 15 December 2021
Friday 5 August 2022
Sunday 28 February 2021