7 July 2026
Every secondary teacher knows the feeling. A Year 7 class arrives in September full of enthusiasm — hands up, eyes forward, eager to please. Fast forward a few months, and the same class can feel markedly different: quieter, less responsive, occasionally resistant.
Writing in TES, David Thomas, CEO of Axiom Maths, describes this familiar experience. His research suggests that, by the summer of Year 7, students are significantly less likely to enjoy Maths than they were in Year 6. What is striking is not just that this happens, but how quickly — and how unevenly.
Yet as many classroom teachers will recognise, this pattern is not confined to Maths. It can affect Computing too, albeit playing out on a slightly different timeline.
When the shine wears off
Thomas identifies the spring term, between Christmas and Easter as the critical point where engagement drops most sharply. With multiple lessons a week, Maths provides fertile ground for this decline to emerge quickly.
In Computing, Craig and Dave suggest the change is often delayed. With fewer curriculum hours, students tend to sustain their enthusiasm through Year 7. But the dip still comes.
Year sevens are generally keen all year, but it’s when they come back in Year 8 that you really notice the shift. They’re more comfortable in the school and more complacent about learning.
This is a useful reminder, the issue is not tied to a specific term, but to a broader transition. As students settle into secondary school, the initial novelty fades and deeper challenges begin to surface.
The balancing act teachers know too well
One of Thomas’s key findings centres on the tension between repetition and pace. Teachers must reconcile wildly different starting points, often reteaching content to establish a common foundation.
In principle, this is sound pedagogy. In practice, it can be deeply frustrating for students with some thinking, “We’ve already done this — why are we still here?” Others are completely bamboozled and trying to keep up.
In Computing, this disparity can feel even more pronounced. Pupils arrive with highly variable experiences — from those who have explored coding in depth to those who have barely used a keyboard. The result is a classroom where boredom and anxiety coexist.
The danger lies in assuming that this tension is unavoidable. While it may not be fully solvable, thoughtful planning, adaptive tasks, extension pathways, low-threshold/high-ceiling activities can mitigate its impact.
Confidence: the slow erosion
If the mismatch of difficulty is the spark, then loss of confidence is the slow-burning fire. Thomas’s research highlights a growing confidence gap — one that emerges before any clear attainment gap. Teachers see this every day, though often in subtle ways. In Year 7, when you pose a question to the class, it’s “me, me, me” — hands shooting up. By Year 8, some students just… stop. They don’t want to put themselves out there anymore.
What changes is not just academic confidence, but social awareness. Participation becomes risky. It is no longer about impressing the teacher, but about fitting in with peers.
This creates a difficult tension. The very behaviours that support learning — asking questions, making mistakes, persevering — are precisely those that can feel socially uncomfortable. Left unchecked, this quiet withdrawal becomes self-reinforcing. The more you think students don’t want to engage, the less you push it, and the less you push it, the less they do. It becomes a downward spiral.
Classroom climate: more than behaviour management
Thomas also identifies a decline in classroom climate — reduced collaboration, less effective listening, and increased disruption. This is not simply a behaviour issue, but a cultural one. Being “too cool for school” changes everything.
Once that shift takes hold, even well-planned lessons struggle to land. Group work becomes harder to sustain. Discussion loses its richness. Students who want to engage can feel inhibited by those around them. However, sustaining high expectations is essential, even when it feels difficult. The moment you lose heart, they lose heart.
The unequal recovery
Perhaps the most concerning aspect of Thomas’s findings is what happens next. Some students begin to re-engage — but this recovery is not evenly distributed. More advantaged pupils are more likely to regain enjoyment. Others remain disengaged, widening the gap in both attitude and, eventually, attainment.
Teachers recognise this pattern, even if they do not always name it explicitly. Some pupils find their way back through extracurricular activities or additional support. Others drift further away. For a long time, both teachers and students have responded to this by asking whether the curriculum is truly fit for purpose for all learners.
This tension sits at the heart of inclusive teaching. The goal is not universal passion, but universal opportunity.
Beyond “teenagers being teenagers”
A common explanation for declining motivation is adolescence itself. Hormones, identity, social pressures all play a role, but we should caution against using it as a catch-all explanation. Instead, perhaps there is a deeper mismatch between student needs and school structures.
As adolescents develop, they increasingly seek:
- autonomy — choice and independence;
- competence — a sense of progress and success;
- belonging — connection and identity.
Yet, secondary schools can often drift in the opposite direction creating environments that are controlling, performance-focused which results in spoon-feeding and impersonal. Then we’re surprised when motivation drops.
This is not an indictment of individuals, but of systems. Teachers operate within demanding structures — large classes, heavy workloads, constant pressures. It is easy to fall into cycles of survival rather than reflection. But awareness is a starting point.
Rebuilding the spark
The motivation dip is not inevitable. Nor is it irreversible. If anything, the research and classroom reflections suggest that there is a crucial window — particularly towards the end of Year 7 where small, deliberate shifts can have lasting impact.
Some principles stand out:
- Protect confidence early
Notice the students who have gone quiet. Create opportunities where success feels visible and safe. - Guard the classroom culture
Maintain high expectations for participation and collaboration, even when it is challenging. - Keep the subject ‘alive’
Don’t strip out engaging activities simply because they are harder to manage. - Offer meaningful challenge
As Thomas argues, the answer is not easier content, but richer experiences — problems that genuinely engage curiosity.
A profession worth backing
Ultimately, this is as much about teachers as it is about students. Sustaining engagement requires energy, reflection and, at times, resilience. Teaching is not a theoretical exercise. It is lived, complex, and often messy, but within that complexity lies opportunity. The patterns we see are not fixed; they are shaped by the environments we create. While no classroom is perfect, every classroom has the potential to shift the trajectory. The Year 7 dip may be predictable, but it is also preventable.
Want to know more? Check out our ‘At the chalk face’ episode on YouTube.