Perfectionism in high school students
See how fear of mistakes often drives more procrastination than laziness does.
Parents often hear “I’ll do it later” so often that it starts sounding like defiance. But procrastination in high school is often what overwhelm, perfectionism, executive functioning strain, and anxiety look like from the outside. The student delays because starting feels harder than it should.
Sometimes the task is unclear. Sometimes the student is afraid of doing it badly. Sometimes they genuinely do not know how to begin. Procrastination often fades only when the deeper barrier becomes clearer.
See how fear of mistakes often drives more procrastination than laziness does.
Look at how delay often grows out of a student feeling swamped by the whole workload.
See what support can look like when starting and sequencing are part of the real problem.
An Academic Success Assessment can help your family understand whether procrastination is being driven by anxiety, perfectionism, executive functioning, school overwhelm, or a broader support mismatch.