By Dr. Amy Coopersmith
Learned helplessness occurs when a child repeatedly experiences situations where:
- Their efforts don’t seem to change the outcome
- Adults consistently step in to fix or rescue
- Tasks feel overwhelming or unpredictable
- Mistakes are emphasized more than growth
Over time, the child may internalize a powerful belief:
“Nothing I do makes a difference.”
This belief can show up as avoidance, passivity, frustration, or even behavioral outbursts. Beneath the surface is often fear — fear of failing, fear of trying, fear of confirming a negative self-image. This fear may affect both children and adults who stick to safe, easy activities in order to avoid failure.
Why Some Children Are More Likely to Develop Learned Helplessness
While any child can develop learned helplessness, it is especially common among children who:
- Struggle academically
- Have disabilities
- Experience trauma
- Receive frequent corrective feedback
- Are over-supported or over-protected
In many cases, adults are acting out of care. We want children to succeed. We want to reduce frustration. But when we consistently remove struggle, we may also remove opportunities for growth.
Signs of Learned Helplessness
You might notice a child who:
- Gives up quickly
- Avoids challenging tasks
- Waits for adults before taking action
- Seeks constant reassurance
- Blames outside factors for outcomes
- Becomes disproportionately upset by small mistakes
These behaviors are not laziness. They are protective strategies.
How to Help Children Overcome Learned Helplessness
1. Normalize Struggle
Children need to hear that difficulty is part of learning.
Instead of:
“Let me fix that.”
Try:
“This is tricky. Let’s figure it out together.”
Struggle should feel supported — not shaming.
2. Reintroduce Choice
Choice builds agency. Even small decisions — choosing materials, selecting the order of tasks — reinforce the message:
“Your actions matter.”
Start small. Build gradually.
3. Shift Praise Toward Effort and Strategy
Avoid labeling children as “smart” or “talented.” Instead, highlight:
- Effort
- Persistence
- Problem-solving
- Flexibility
For example:
“I noticed you tried a different way when the first way didn’t work.”
This reinforces a growth mindset.
4. Provide Just Enough Support, But Don’t Rescue
This means offering just enough help to move forward — without taking over.
Ask:
- “What’s the first step?”
- “What do you already know?”
- “What could you try next?”
The goal is competence, not perfection.
5. Teach Reflection
After a task, ask:
- “What worked?”
- “What would you do differently next time?”
Reflection helps children connect effort to outcome — the opposite of helplessness.
6. Create Predictable Opportunities for Success
Children rebuild confidence through repeated experiences of mastery.
Start with tasks that are slightly challenging but achievable. Success builds momentum.
The Role of Self-Determination
At its core, overcoming learned helplessness is about restoring self-determination — the belief that:
- I can make choices.
- My efforts influence outcomes.
- I can solve problems.
- I can recover from mistakes.
When children develop these beliefs, they don’t just complete tasks — they develop resilience.
A Final Thought
Learned helplessness is not a fixed trait. It is a learned pattern — and what is learned can be unlearned.
When adults intentionally create environments that promote choice, reflection, effort, and supported challenge, children begin to rewrite their internal narrative.
Instead of:
“I can’t.”
They begin to say:
“Let me try.”
And that shift changes everything.
There are many meaningful ways to strengthen a child’s motivation and engagement. “I’m Stuck” offers practical, everyday strategies that help children build confidence, develop problem-solving skills, and truly believe that their choices and actions can influence their own lives. To download additional free ready-made resources, go to the Self-Determination Resources page at amycoopersmith.com!