School Anxiety and Refusal

Neurodiversity Hub Wirral

If your child feels anxious about school, or cannot attend, it can be exhausting for you both.
Mornings may feel especially difficult as you try to balance your child’s feelings with the need to get them to school and manage your own responsibilities.

Even if you reach the school gate, you may know your child will struggle through the day — or that the same worry will appear again tomorrow.

When anxiety becomes so strong that a child cannot go to school, this is sometimes called school refusal.

Many families prefer the terms:

  • Emotionally‑Based School Avoidance (EBSA)

  • Anxiety‑related absence

These phrases do not suggest that staying home is a choice.

school building

School Anxiety & Refusal

This information is taken from the YoungMinds website.

It is normal for children and young people to worry about school at times — such as starting a new school or during exams.
But for some children, school becomes stressful or distressing for a much longer period.