Most parents do not notice their child is falling behind until the gap is already significant. By the time grades drop, a child has usually been struggling quietly for weeks or months, filling in missing knowledge with guesswork, avoiding the subjects that feel hard, and slowly losing confidence in their ability to learn.
The earlier you identify the signs, the easier it is to close the gap. Here are seven clear indicators that your child may need more support than the classroom is currently providing, and what to do about it.
1. Grades Are Declining and Explanations Are Vague
A single bad test happens to every student. A pattern of declining grades across several weeks or a full semester is something different.
When you ask your child what happened, pay attention to the answer. “I don’t know” or “the teacher goes too fast” or “I just didn’t study enough” are surface-level explanations that often point to a deeper issue: your child does not have a solid enough grasp of the foundational material to keep up with what is being taught now.
Most subjects build on themselves. Math, reading, writing, science, and foreign languages all require prior knowledge to make sense of new concepts. When a foundational piece is missing, everything that follows becomes harder. A grade decline is often not about effort. It is about gaps.
2. Homework Takes Much Longer Than It Should
Every assignment has a reasonable time expectation. When homework that should take 20 minutes is regularly taking an hour or more, that is a signal worth paying attention to.
Excessive homework time usually means one of two things: your child does not understand the material well enough to work through it independently, or they are struggling with focus, organization, and executive functioning skills that make it difficult to start and sustain tasks without support.
Both are addressable with the right kind of help. A private tutor can identify which one is driving the problem and build a targeted plan to solve it.
3. Your Child Avoids or Dreads a Specific Subject
Avoidance is one of the most reliable early warning signs in education. When a child consistently refuses to start homework in a particular subject, claims to hate it, or finds every possible reason to delay engaging with it, they are almost always telling you something important: the subject feels impossible, and they have stopped believing they can succeed at it.
This is different from a child who finds a subject boring but pushes through without resistance. Avoidance with strong emotional resistance is a sign that the difficulty has crossed from manageable to overwhelming.
Left unaddressed, subject avoidance tends to compound. The longer a child avoids a subject, the further behind they fall, and the harder it becomes to re-engage. Early intervention with a tutor who can rebuild confidence alongside skill is far more effective than waiting for the situation to resolve on its own.
4. Your Child Says They Feel Stupid or Can’t Do It
This one is critical and should never be dismissed as dramatic.
When a child starts using language like “I’m bad at math,” “I’m not smart enough,” or “I just can’t do it,” they are telling you that their academic struggles have moved beyond the subject matter and into their identity. They are no longer just missing a skill. They are building a story about themselves as a learner, and that story will shape how they approach challenges for years to come.
Research on academic mindset consistently shows that children who develop a fixed, negative self-concept around learning disengage faster, give up more quickly, and take longer to recover from setbacks than peers who see their abilities as something that can grow with effort and support.
A skilled private tutor does not just teach content. They rebuild the relationship a child has with learning itself.
5. There Is a Gap Between Effort and Results
Some of the hardest situations for parents to identify are the ones where their child is genuinely trying. They are doing the homework, attending class, and putting in time, but the grades and comprehension are not reflecting that effort.
This gap between input and output is often a sign of a learning difference, a processing issue, or a fundamental misalignment between how the child learns and how the material is being taught. It can also point to gaps in foundational knowledge that are quietly undermining everything built on top of them.
Whatever the cause, this pattern is a clear signal that the current approach is not working and that something needs to change. More effort in the same direction will not produce different results.
6. Transitions Have Disrupted Their Academic Momentum
School transitions are some of the highest-risk periods for academic regression. Moving from elementary to middle school, middle to high school, changing schools, relocating, or shifting from in-person to online learning all require students to adapt quickly to new expectations, new environments, and often significantly harder material.
Many students who were performing well before a transition find themselves struggling afterward, not because they have become less capable, but because the support structures they relied on are no longer in place and the new environment demands more independence than they were prepared for.
Private tutoring during and after major transitions gives students the bridge they need to re-establish their footing before the gap becomes difficult to close.
7. Standardized Test Scores Are Significantly Below Expectations
Standardized tests like the SAT, ACT, ISEE, AP exams, and state assessments measure skills that are often different from what is assessed in day-to-day classroom work. A student who performs adequately in class but scores significantly below their target range on a standardized test is telling you that there are specific skill gaps that need to be addressed strategically.
Test preparation is a distinct skill set. It requires understanding the structure and logic of each exam, building pacing and strategy, and targeting the specific content areas where the student is losing points. Generic studying is rarely enough. Structured, one-on-one test prep with a tutor who knows the exam is consistently one of the highest-return investments a family can make in their child’s academic future.
What to Do If You Recognize These Signs
The most important thing is to act early. Academic gaps do not close on their own, and the longer a child struggles without targeted support, the more ground they have to make up and the more damage is done to their confidence and motivation.
Here is a practical path forward:
Start with an honest conversation with your child. Ask how school feels, not just how they are performing. Listen for the emotional subtext behind their answers.
Reach out to their teacher or school to understand what they are observing. You may get information that confirms your instincts or reveals something you were not aware of.
Consider a professional assessment. A qualified educator can identify exactly where the gaps are, what is driving them, and what kind of support will be most effective for your child specifically.
Then get the right support in place as quickly as possible. One-on-one private tutoring with a matched, qualified educator is consistently the most effective intervention available for students who are struggling, regardless of the subject, grade level, or root cause.
The Bottom Line
Falling behind in school is not a reflection of a child’s intelligence or potential. It is almost always a sign that the current approach is not meeting their specific needs, and that a more personalized form of support is required.
The seven signs in this post are not causes for panic. They are information. And the sooner you act on that information, the faster your child can get back on track, rebuild their confidence, and start performing at the level they are genuinely capable of.
Ready to Find Out Exactly What Your Child Needs?
At Novel Education Group, we specialize in matching students with qualified, compatible educators who provide personalized, results-driven tutoring across all subjects and grade levels. Whether your child needs targeted subject support, test prep, or a more comprehensive academic plan, we will help you figure out the right next step.
Schedule a free consultation today
Novel Education Group offers private tutoring, test prep, and homeschooling programs for K-12 students in Los Angeles, New York, Austin, Miami, and worldwide. In-person and virtual options available.







