Lindsey Straus Lindsey Straus   IN: What's New, Top Stories, Treatment & Management   Tagged: ,  
  • Lindsey Straus

    Author: Lindsey Straus is an award-winning youth sports journalist, practicing attorney, and has been Senior Editor of SmartTeams since its launch as MomsTEAM in August 2000. She can be reached at lbartonstraus@MomsTEAM.com.

  • Lindsey Straus

More Post-Concussion Help For Students In Classroom Needed

An overwhelming majority of both athletes returning to the classroom after a concussion and their parents are “very concerned” that academic performance will be negatively affected, finds a recent survey. 

Majorities of both athletes and parents surveyed called for schools to do more to support the recovery of students from concussions through academic accommodations, such as extra time to complete tasks, reduced homework, and rest breaks. 

Grades suffer after concussion

Researchers at Children’s National Medical Center in Washington, D.C. (CNMC) posed ten questions to a group of 55 children, age 10-18 years, and their parents, referred to the concussion clinic at the center within 60 days of a diagnosis of concussion.  Three quarters of the concussions were sports-related. Nine in ten had returned to school after missing an average of 4.4 days.  Nearly one in five (18.5%) had missed no days of school. Here’s what they found:

  • Nearly nine out of ten students (87%) and parents (86.8%) reported being mildly, moderately, or very concerned that school learning and memory would be negatively affected by concussion, with half expressing moderate concern to being very concerned.
  • Students reported multiple symptoms of concussion, with three-quarters (73.5%) reporting headaches, two-thirds (65.3%) saying they were having trouble paying attention in class, and a majority saying homework took too long (61.2%), and experiencing difficulty studying for tests and quizzes (55.1%).
  • Math was far and away the class with which students said they were having the most difficulty (75% versus social studies at 50%), and the subject in which both they and their parents reported grades that were either dropping or at risk of dropping.
  • A majority of both students (52.8%) and parents (53.1%) felt extra time was the academic accommodation most needed, followed by reduced homework (37.7%/36% respectively) and rest breaks (34%/30%).
  • Asked to identify school personnel who could best direct the student support process, both parents (47.2%) and students (44.2%) picked the guidance counselor, followed by the school nurse (35.5%/37.7%) and athletic trainer (26.9%/30.2%).
  • Only one in six students (16.7%) and one in four parents (26.4%) were aware of a written school-based concussion policy and procedures to support recovery, although solid majorities of students (88.7%) and parents (92.3%) were mildly to very confident in the school’s ability to help the student’s recovery. 58% of parents said they would like to see additional concussion education and training at their child’s school.

Structured return-to-school programs needed

The findings point to a “need in schools across the country for systematic post-concussion academic support and management,” wrote lead author, Gerard A. Gioia, Chief of the Division of Pediatric Neuropsychology and Director of Safe the Concussion Outcome, Recovery & Education (SCORE) Program at CNMC.

“While states have passed legislation to implement policies on athletic return-to-play guidelines for injured student-athletes,”  Gioia argued, “the same attention must be directed to formal policies and procedures to support the recovery of the student [in the classroom].” “Structured return-to-school programs would prepare personnel to provide active support and management to students who have sustained concussions.  The school system must be prepared to build these supports specific to that student’s individual needs,” said Gioia.


Source: Children’s National Medical Center

1.  Halstead ME, et al. Clinical Report – Returning to Learning Following a Concussion. Pediatrics doi:10.1542/peds.2013-2867 (epub October 27, 2013).

Recommended for further reading/viewing

Few States Regulate Return To Learn After Concussion
Return to Learn Just As Important As Return to Sports, AAP Says 
Return to Learn After Concussion: Modify School Environment To Avoid Triggering Symptoms (video)
Return to Class After Concussion Different for Every Student (video)
Academic Accommodations After Concussion (video)
Concussions Hurt Academic Learning And Performance of Children and Teens
Post-Concussion Strategies for the Classroom
Recovering from Concussion: Teachers Play Important Role

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