Research Shows Children's Wellbeing Drops When They Start Secondary School Here's Why
Data from a 2024-2025 survey carried out by education support and research company ImpactEd Group with over 80,000 pupils shows a drop in children's wellbeing between year six – the last year of primary school – and year eight.
This report found that enjoyment of school plummets, feelings of safety decline, and belief that their efforts will lead to success (known as self-efficacy) drops significantly. Children receiving free school meals were also less likely to say they enjoyed school, with this gap continuing to widen into secondary school.
This isn't just adolescent growing pains. Secondary school pupils in the UK are more miserable than their European peers. Data from the Pisa programme, which assesses student achievement and wellbeing internationally, shows that in 2022 the UK's 15-year-olds had the lowest average life satisfaction in Europe.
It's a systemic problem – but one that can be changed.
Difficult transitionsMoving to secondary school involves much more than a change of location. Pupils must adapt to new teachers, routines, academic demands and social dynamics. And this takes place while they are going through puberty, one of the most intense periods of emotional and neurological development.
Research on school transitions stresses that success depends not only on a child's“readiness,” but also on the school system's capacity to support them.
Unfortunately, many schools prioritise performance metrics over relationships. This may leave many pupils – particularly those who are neurodivergent, have special educational needs, or who come from minoritised backgrounds – feeling disconnected and unsupported. This can deeply affect their wellbeing.
One major barrier to belonging is the use of zero-tolerance behaviour policies . These strict approaches to discipline – silent corridors, isolation booths , high-stakes punishments such as suspensions – are becoming more common in large secondaries and academies. Advocates have claimed these policies create firm boundaries in schools. But for many pupils, especially those with ADHD, autism, or a history of trauma, they may instead create anxiety, alienation and disengagement from school.
Children with special educational needs are excluded from school at some of the highest rates in the country. According to the Children and Young People's Mental Health Coalition , a collaborative network of over 300 organisations including mental health organisations and youth support services, many of these children are not“misbehaving,” but expressing unmet emotional and mental health needs. Punitive responses frequently worsen their difficulties.
The environment of secondary school can be very different to that of primary education. Rawpixel/Shutterstock
Schools that adopt behaviour policies that focus on emotional literacy and building trust have reported success in building a caring environment.
A hidden curriculumWhile these challenges affect many students, working-class pupils often face a more acute and entrenched form of educational alienation. A deeper look into the structure of secondary education in England reveals systemic inequalities that shape how different children experience school.
According to Professor Diane Reay, a leading expert on education and social class, the British school system continues to fail working-class children . Her research suggests that schools in disadvantaged areas are more likely to feature rigid discipline,“teaching to the test,” and a narrow, fact-heavy curriculum. In such spaces, there is little room for creativity, critical thinking, or personal expression.
Instead of feeling seen and valued, many working-class students may experience school as a place of constant control and low expectations. They are more likely to encounter deficit narratives: being told what they lack, rather than having their strengths recognised or nurtured.
This dynamic plays out most starkly during the transition to secondary school. Pupils from working-class backgrounds often enter year seven already disadvantaged – socially, economically, and in terms of cultural capital. This means that in unfamiliar settings where middle-class norms dominate, they may not speak the“right” way, dress the“right” way, or know the unspoken rules. These students frequently find themselves on the outside looking in.
Beyond class, issues of race and cultural background also play a key role in how pupils experience school. Students from minority backgrounds often also encounter what researchers refer to as the“hidden curriculum”.
This is a set of unspoken norms that reflect white, middle-class values, and which they may be unfamiliar with. This affects everything from which stories are told in the curriculum to how the behaviour of students is interpreted by teachers.
The year-seven dip is not inevitable. But reversing it requires more than tweaks to transition plans or behaviour policies. It demands a fundamental shift in how we understand inclusion, belonging and educational success. Schools need to put policies in place that help students feel safe, connected and empowered to manage conflict. And they should recognise that working-class and marginalised pupils face systemic barriers, and commit to dismantling them.


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