Many parents expect behavior to improve as the school year comes to an end. However, for many children and teens, the opposite happens. The end of the school year is often one of the most emotionally and mentally demanding times of the year.

End of School Year Burnout in Kids and Teens

Why This Time of Year Can Be Difficult for Kids and Teens

By May, many kids and teens are tired. They have spent months managing school expectations, social situations, extracurricular activities, homework, and busy schedules. Even children who are doing well academically may be working very hard emotionally and socially every day.

At the same time, routines start to change. There may be end-of-year events, testing, schedule changes, and conversations about summer or next school year. Transitions are difficult for many children and teens, even positive transitions. When routines change and stress increases, emotional regulation often becomes harder.

Because of this, the end of the school year is a time when we often see:

  • More emotional reactions
  • More irritability
  • More conflict at home
  • More shutdown after school
  • More anxiety
  • More difficulty with homework
  • More fatigue
  • Less motivation

This does not mean something is wrong with your child or teen. Often, it means they are tired, overwhelmed, and running low on coping energy.

Signs of Burnout in Children and Teens

Children and teens do not usually say, “I am burned out.” Instead, burnout often shows up in behavior, emotions, sleep, or motivation.

Some common signs of end-of-school-year burnout include:

  • Being more emotional than usual
  • Irritability or short temper
  • Trouble waking up for school
  • Complaining of headaches or stomachaches
  • Increased anxiety
  • More difficulty with homework
  • Missing assignments
  • Staying up very late
  • Sleeping much more on weekends
  • Loss of motivation
  • Emotional shutdown after school
  • Saying “I don’t care” about school
  • Increased conflict at home

Burnout in kids and teens often looks like behavior problems, laziness, or attitude. In reality, it is often stress, exhaustion, and emotional overload.

Many children and teens are trying very hard to hold it together at school, and home is where they finally release their emotions. This can be very frustrating for parents, but it is also very common.

Why These Behaviors and Emotions Increase

From a nervous system perspective, children and teens can only manage stress for so long before their regulation skills start to decrease. Over the course of a long school year, their nervous system is often in a more activated state for many hours each day.

School requires:

  • Attention and focus
  • Following directions
  • Managing social situations
  • Handling academic pressure
  • Sitting still for long periods
  • Managing frustration
  • Managing anxiety
  • Transitioning between tasks
  • Meeting expectations

By the end of the year, many kids and teens are simply tired of holding it together all day. Their nervous system has less capacity for frustration, transitions, and emotional control.

When the nervous system is overwhelmed, we often see:

  • Fight (anger, arguing, defiance)
  • Flight (avoidance, procrastination, anxiety)
  • Freeze (shutdown, numbness, lack of motivation)
  • Cling (needing more reassurance, more connection)

Understanding behavior through a nervous system lens can help parents respond with support instead of only consequences.

What Parents Can Do to Help

The end of the school year is often a time to focus on support, structure, and connection, rather than increasing pressure.

Some helpful strategies include:

Focus on sleep

Many kids and teens are very sleep deprived by the end of the school year. Sleep has a huge impact on emotional regulation.

Keep routines predictable

Even if schedules are busy, try to keep bedtime, morning routines, and after-school routines somewhat consistent.

Reduce unnecessary pressure

This may not be the time to add new activities, increase expectations, or push for perfection.

Break tasks into smaller steps

Large assignments or projects can feel overwhelming. Help your child break tasks into smaller, manageable pieces.

Expect more emotions

If you expect more irritability or emotional reactions, you may be able to respond more calmly when they happen.

Spend one-on-one time together

Even short periods of connection can help kids and teens regulate emotionally.

Focus on finishing, not finishing perfectly

For many kids and teens, the goal at the end of the year is to finish strong enough, not perfectly.

When kids and teens are overwhelmed, connection and regulation usually help more than punishment or increased pressure.

When Therapy May Be Helpful

For some children and teens, stress and burnout at the end of the school year are temporary and improve with rest and routine changes. However, therapy may be helpful if you notice:

  • Anxiety that interferes with school or sleep
  • Frequent emotional outbursts
  • Ongoing conflict at home
  • School refusal or avoidance
  • Significant shutdown or withdrawal
  • Ongoing difficulty with emotional regulation
  • Behavioral issues at school or home
  • Trauma history that affects school or social situations
  • Low self-esteem or high perfectionism
  • Burnout that does not improve with rest

Therapy can help children and teens develop emotional regulation skills, coping skills, and a better understanding of their emotions and stress.

How Therapy Can Help

At Mighty Minds Therapy, we use a trauma-informed and nervous system-informed approach to support children, teens, and families.

For children, therapy may include play therapy, which helps children express emotions, process experiences, and build emotional regulation skills through play, art, movement, and creative activities.

For teens, therapy often focuses on:

  • Stress and anxiety
  • Emotional regulation
  • School pressure and burnout
  • Social stress
  • Identity and self-esteem
  • Trauma and difficult experiences
  • Communication and family relationships

We also work with parents to help them understand behavior through a developmental and nervous system lens. This can help families build strategies that support regulation, connection, and structure at home.

Our goal is not just to reduce behavior problems. We want to help children, teens, and families feel more regulated, more connected, and more supported.

Support for Families in Denver & Wheat Ridge

If your child or teen seems more emotional, more tired, more irritable, or less motivated right now, you are not alone.

The end of the school year is a demanding time for many kids and teens.

Often what looks like behavior is actually stress, fatigue, or emotional overload. With the right support, children and teens can finish the year feeling more supported, understood, and regulated.

Support, structure, sleep, and connection can go a long way during this time of year.

Schedule a Free 15-Minute Consultation to learn how we can help.

Therapy Services in Denver and Wheat Ridge

Mighty Minds Therapy provides therapy services for children, teens, adults, and families in Wheat Ridge, Colorado, serving the greater Denver area including Denver, Lakewood, Arvada, and Westminster. Our services include play therapy, teen therapy, EMDR, trauma therapy, parent support, and therapy for helping professionals including nurses, doctors, therapists, and first responders.

Therapy services may help with anxiety, emotional regulation, trauma, behavior challenges, burnout, life transitions, parenting support, and family stress. Our goal is to provide a supportive and evidence-based approach to therapy for children, teens, adults, and families.

Follow Mighty Minds Therapy

For more mental health tips, parenting insights, and information about therapy for children, teens, adults, and helping professionals, you can follow Mighty Minds Therapy on social media.

We regularly share information about play therapy, teen therapy, trauma therapy, EMDR, parenting support, emotional regulation, and mental health resources.

Considering Therapy?

If you are considering therapy for your child, your teen, yourself, or your family, Mighty Minds Therapy offers in-person therapy in Wheat Ridge, Colorado and telehealth services where available. We offer a free 15-minute consultation to help determine if therapy may be a good fit for your needs.

You can learn more about our services or schedule a consultation through our website.