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Helping Children Overcome Test Anxiety	
	
Test anxiety is almost universal. In fact, it is unusual to find a student who doesn’t approach a big 
test without a high level of anxiety. Test anxiety can cause a host of problems in students, such as 
upset stomach, headache, loss of focus, fear, irritability, anger and even depression. New research is 
helping to better define how emotional stress and anxiety affect learning and academic performance.

Stressful emotions can inhibit a student’s ability to absorb, retain and recall information. Anxiety 
creates a kind of "noise" or "mental static" in the brain that blocks our ability to retrieve what’s 
stored in memory and also greatly impairs our ability to comprehend and reason. The key to 
understanding how anxiety inhibits cognitive and physical performance lies in understanding how 
emotions affect the rhythmic activity in the nervous system.

Feelings such as frustration, fear, anger and anxiety cause the neural activity in the two branches of 
the autonomic nervous system to get out of sync. This, in turn, affects the synchronized activity in 
the brain, disrupting our ability to think clearly. On the other hand, uplifting feelings such as 
appreciation lead to increased harmony and synchronization in the brain and nervous system, which 
facilitates our ability to think more clearly.

Research has shown that providing students with tools and strategies that build both emotional 
skills and healthy physical habits when preparing for a test can help them overcome test anxiety and 
the associated symptoms, while improving their ability to prepare for and perform on critical testing. 
It’s important to help students identify what they are feeling and give them tools that will help them 
learn to manage emotions such as anxiety, self-doubt, anger or frustration. The proper physical 
habits enable students to have enough energy and stamina for their brain to do its job of thinking 
and analyzing for a sustained period of time.

Here are a few tips from the Institute of HeartMath based on its TestEdge™ programs. Share these 
with your children ahead of time to better prepare them emotionally and physically for test taking.

Tips for Students
Practice the neutral tool: When you have uncomfortable feelings about whether you will do well on 
the test, practice the neutral tool. It’s important to catch negative mind loops that reinforce self-
doubt or uncomfortable feelings. Every time you catch a negative thought repeating itself, stop the 
loop and practice  going to neutral. Start by focusing on the area around your heart. This helps to 
take the focus off the mind loop. Then breathe deeply. Breathe as if your breath is flowing in and out 
through the center of your chest. Breathe quietly and naturally, four-five seconds on the in-breath, 
and four-five seconds on the out-breath. While you’re breathing, try and find an attitude of 
calmness about the situation. Do this in the days leading up to the test, right before and during the 
test.

Address the what-if questions: A lot of times before we have to do something like take a test, much 
of the anxiety we feel is a build-up from negative “what-if’” thoughts. What if I fail, what if I can’t 
remember anything, or what if I run out of time. Try writing a what-if question that is positive and 
can help you take the big deal out of the situation and begin to see things in a different way. 
Examples of these kinds of questions are, “What if I can remember more than I think I can?” “What if I 
can feel calmer than I think I can?”

Think good thoughts: Science is showing that good feelings like appreciation can actually help your 
brain work better. When you feel nervous or anxious, try this. You can do it as many times as you 
need to or want to. Remember something that nakes you feel good. Maybe it is your pet or how you 
felt when you got a big hug from your mom, or how you felt after a super fun day at the amusement 
park with your friends. After you remember how you felt, hold that feeling. Pretend you are holding it 
in your heart. Let yourself feel that feeling for 10-20 seconds or more. It’s important to let yourself 
really feel that good feeling all over again. Practice this tool right before the big test.

Get enough sleep: Big tests require a lot of energy and stamina to be able to focus for several hours. 
Make sure you get at least eight-10 hours of sleep the night before the test.
Have fun: Do something fun the night before to take your mind off the test, like see a movie, play a 
board game with your family or participate in a sports activity. That way your mind and emotions are 
more relaxed in the time leading up to the test.

Eat a hearty breakfast: The brain needs a lot of energy to maintain focus on a big test for several 
hours. Eat a hearty and healthy breakfast, including complex carbohydrates and protein to make your 
energy last as long as possible. Foods such as eggs, cereal and whole-wheat toast help energize your 
brain to think more clearly and much longer compared with the fast-disappearing bolt of energy 
from drinking a soda pop or eating a cookie for breakfast. For a snack food, bring simple foods such 
as peanut butter and crackers, cheese and crackers or a burrito to sustain energy until lunch.

Practicing these tools in advance of and during a test can help students limit test anxiety and 
perform even better on their school work.

This material has been provided by the Institute of HeartMath, a nonprofit research and education 
organization specializing in research on how stress and emotions impact learning and performance. 
To learn more about the TestEdge™ programs and tools for enhancing academic performance visit 
www.heartmath.org.


For More Information

The Institute of HeartMath
www.heartmath.org/education/testedge/why.php

Family Education Network www.familyeducation.com/article/0,1120,66-2127,00.html

Learning Solutions
http://learningsolutions.lisd.k12.mi.us/newpage1.htm

The American Institute of Stress
www.stress.org


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