Many parents may have noticed their children seemed on edge
during their first week of school. They may have been agitated, withdrawn or
more focused on themselves, rather than what was going on around them. Such
behaviours are classic symptoms of high anxiety, says Université de Montréal
researcher Richard Tremblay.
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Tremblay
is a professor emeritus whose area of expertise is childhood psychology and
psychiatry, particularly antisocial behaviour. In 1984, he launched a
longitudinal study that focused on the development of children from conception
on. Many of the original participants are now in their mid-30s. Thanks in part
to funding from the Canada Foundation for Innovation, Tremblay was able to
build a mobile lab in 2005 that allowed him to park this study at participants’
front door — a convenience that helped ensure their cooperation over decades.
He
says the longer timelines of his study gave him the chance to better understand
the hereditary and environmental factors that lead a child to become
aggressive, depressed or anxious.
Tremblay
says the anxiety young students feel as they return to school is often related
to the uncertainties they feel about their new teacher and classroom
environment, the kids they’ll interact with and whether their bullies will hunt
them down during recess.
“It’s
a big change in the rhythm of life for everybody, especially children,” says
Tremblay. “Those who have problems with anxiety often create worst-case
scenarios, almost like horror stories in their minds.”
But
Tremblay adds that being prone to such back to school horrors is not isolated
to the imaginations of young students. Rather, their sky-is-falling tendencies
may have been inherited from their parents, he says.
“There
is a big genetic effect in terms of anxiety behaviours,” says Tremblay. “The
best predictors of anxiety or depression among children are their parents’ own
struggles with the same disorders. In other words, if you have a very anxious
mother or father, you are at high risk of being an anxious child.”
Parents
pass their anxious tendencies to children through their genes, predisposing the
next generation to bouts of apprehension, says Tremblay. “But a child’s anxiety
can be amplified by their environment,” he adds. “If you’re brought up by an
anxious mother or father and you’re genetically predisposed to these
conditions, you will have a difficult time learning how to control your
anxiety.”
Tremblay
outlines the consequences of this increased on-edge behaviour, suggesting the
tightly-wound types are more likely to become depressed. They may have serious
problems paying attention in school which could eventually affect their
scholastic achievement and social relations.
And
jittery students often have an additional worry to deal with. Not only are they
nervous about going back to school but they tend to be anxious about being
anxious once they get there. “It’s a meta problem,” says Tremblay, referring to
how anxiety about one thing can generate anxiety about another.
To
deal with such concerns, Tremblay encourages parents to monitor their
children’s behaviour in the first week of school. “Parents need to think about
who their child is, how they’re child has coped in the past and what worked and
what didn’t,” says Tremblay.
He
suggests parents who’ve suffered from anxiety watch for any behavioural
similarities reflected in their children. Once identified, they can use their
own memories of how they coped to guide their children through nerve-wracking
encounters.
If
children aren’t able to relax within the first few weeks of school, Tremblay
recommends parents seek help from the school, from counsellors or even from the
young child’s grandparents. He believes they can offer grounded insight into
what it’s like raising a high-strung kid who then has an anxious child of their
own.
“Grandmama
knows things that can be very helpful,” says Tremblay. “People imagine that new
psychological knowledge will solve all their problems but those old experiences
are very good.”
Source: sciencedaily.com
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