When School Feels Pointless: Helping Your Teen Find Meaning in Their Education
If your teenager has checked out academically—not because they can't do the work, but because they don't see the point—you're not alone. This is one of the most common struggles parents face today.
Explore guides & tools tailored to this situationWhen School Feels Pointless: Helping Your Teen Find Meaning in Their Education
"Mom, why do I need to learn this? When am I ever going to use algebra in real life?"
Sound familiar? If your teenager has checked out academically—not because they can't do the work, but because they don't see the point—you're not alone. This is one of the most common struggles parents face today, and it's persisted post-pandemic despite some recent improvements in engagement trends.
Many teens feel like they're just memorizing for tests with no connection to their lives or futures. This is often described as a crisis of relevance—when students can't link learning to anything meaningful.
Recent Gallup data shows ongoing challenges with student engagement, though improvements have occurred. For example, in 2025 reports from Gallup and the Walton Family Foundation's Voices of Gen Z study, high school student engagement measures reached record highs compared to 2023, but many students still report lacking engaging experiences, with factors like not seeing learning as important or interesting playing a role.
Your teen isn't wrong to ask these questions. The world they're entering looks radically different—jobs changing, AI everywhere, the old "good grades → good job" path less certain.
Dr. Denise Pope from Stanford's Challenge Success initiative emphasizes that students today need to understand the "why" behind learning more than ever. Without it, disengagement follows.
Before we get to solutions, let's talk about what doesn't work:
Avoid: "Because I said so" or "You'll need this for college" – These shut down conversation and confirm school is just hoop-jumping.
Avoid: Bribing with rewards – External motivators decrease intrinsic motivation over time.
Avoid: Comparing them to others – Creates resentment, not motivation.
1. Validate First, Then Investigate
Start here: "You're right—not everything you learn in school will be directly useful. That's a fair observation. Tell me more about what feels pointless to you."
This opens dialogue. For example, in stories from The Disengaged Teen by Jenny Anderson and Rebecca Winthrop (based on real cases and surveys), parents who validated feelings and explored interests helped teens shift modes from "passenger" (disengaged) to more active learning. One teen moved toward "explorer mode" by connecting school to personal passions outside traditional settings.
Your action step: Have a no-judgment conversation. Ask: "If you could learn about anything, what would it be?" and "What do you want your life to look like at 25?" Listen without immediately tying it back to school.
For parent guidance on these conversations, watch psychologist-led videos on talking to teens about motivation (search YouTube for channels like Dr. Lisa Damour).
2. Build Bridges Between School and Real Life
The High Tech High network makes projects connect to real-world problems—borrow their approach at home.
Practical examples:
- Math feels useless? Show real-life applications, like video game designers using trigonometry. Or calculate car loan interest.
- English essays feel pointless? Link writing to YouTube scripts or college essays.
- Science seems abstract? Citizen Science projects for real contributions.
Real example: In a Denver case from The Disengaged Teen, a high schooler (Luis) was failing AP U.S. History and predicted he'd fail the exam. His mom (Susan), using calm support instead of panic, helped him make his own study plan. By taking ownership and seeing relevance, he turned it around—passing and building confidence.
Another inspiring turnaround: High school students in Tennessee used project-based learning in sociology to investigate the real "Redhead Murders" cold case, applying research skills to a genuine mystery. This engaged them deeply, leading to breakthroughs and even a true crime podcast feature—showing how connecting class to unsolved real-world problems reignites drive.
Helping Teens See Purpose
Parent-focused video on helping teens find meaning
3. Shift from Performance to Growth
Carol Dweck's mindset research shows growth mindset (learning as skill-building) sustains motivation better than performance mindset (proving intelligence).
Change your language:
- Instead of: "Did you get an A?" → "What did you learn today that surprised you?"
- Instead of: "You're so smart!" → "I can see how much effort you put into understanding that concept."
Use the "future self" technique: Have your teen write a letter from their 25-year-old self thanking their teenage self for skills developed.
Growth Mindset for Parents
Carol Dweck on growth mindset for parents
Alternatives include:
- Project-based schools: Big Picture Learning network
- Dual enrollment with community colleges
- Online: Khan Academy or Outlier.org
Week 1:
- Day 1-2: Validation conversation
- Day 3-4: Research a career of interest; identify required skills
- Day 5-7: Find ONE school subject connecting to it; explore a real application
Week 2:
- Day 8-10: Try a bridge activity (e.g., citizen science, real math problem)
- Day 11-12: Practice growth mindset language
- Day 13-14: Check in: "What felt different this week?"
Your teen's relevance questions show critical thinking. Help them build the skill of finding meaning and connections—it lasts beyond any equation.
You're raising someone who can find purpose in challenges. That's worth more than any report card.
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Guides & Tools
Resources referenced in this guide to help you dive deeper
Developing a Growth Mindset with Carol Dweck - YouTube
Should you tell your kids they are smart or talented? Professor Carol Dweck answers this question and more, as she talks about her groundbreaking work on dev...
Outlier.org
The future of online college is here.
Teens & Preteens & Young Adults | Berkeley Parents Network
Zooniverse
The Zooniverse is the world's largest and most popular platform for people-powered research.
K-12 School Improvement | Challenge Success–Stanford
Challenge Success partners with K-12 schools to improve well-being, engagement + belonging with research-based, equity-centered strategies.
Examples of Project-Based Learning at High Tech High
Discover the power of project-based learning at High Tech High with these examples of student work. It's our record of what we've done and how to get there.
Big Picture Learning | One Student at a Time
All students can and should live lives of their own design. Lives supported by caring mentors and equitable opportunities to achieve their greatest potential. At Big Picture Learning, we activate opportunities through student centered real world learning to make this so.
Navigating Stress in Schools: How Adaptive Coping Builds Resilience
We’re thrilled to share new resource bundles focusing on student stress and adaptive coping.
The Disengaged Teen | Brookings
Tennessee High Schoolers Used Project-Based Learning to Solve a Nearly 40-Year-Old Serial Murder Mystery - Project Pals
In an extraordinary educational project, students at Elizabethton High School in northeast Tennessee, under the guidance of their sociology teacher Alex…
Teach Write Now – National Writing Project Resource Hub
Khan Academy | Free Online Courses, Lessons & Practice
Learn for free about math, art, computer programming, economics, physics, chemistry, biology, medicine, finance, history, and more. Khan Academy is a nonprofit with the mission of providing a free, world-class education for anyone, anywhere.
Podcasts - Challenge Success
School's In Podcast at Stanford Graduate School of Education with Denise Pope; student-created podcasts; and recent interviews with other thought leaders.
Gen Z Students More Engaged in School, Ready for the Future
Gen Z students are feeling more prepared for and positive about their lives than ever, partly due to a more engaging experience at school.
Place-Based Writing in Action: Opportunities for Authentic Writing in the World Beyond the Classroom - YouTube
Based on the insight that "places are everywhere," this NWP Radio show explores how educators are using place to support students in having authentic opportu...
National Writing Project | Home
NWP leaders study and share effective practices that enhance youth writing and learning, work collaboratively with other educators, design resources, and…
Real-Life Applications of Trigonometry
Discover how trigonometry works and where it's used in real life, from engineering to gaming, in this student-friendly, practical guide.
Redefining Success | School's In Podcast Stanford GSE
On this episode of School’s In, Dr. Denise Pope discusses redefining success and how to improve student wellbeing, belonging, and engagement.
The Teen-Disengagement Crisis - The Atlantic
By middle school, many kids’ interest in learning falls off a cliff. The ripple effects could last for years.