Under pressure to perform, many young learners across India face silent struggles that weigh heavily on their minds. Often overlooked, tension tied to schoolwork builds quietly among undergraduates in countryside colleges. Removed from city advantages, these students wrestle not just with lessons but also unfamiliar settings when they shift to bigger towns for studies. A closer look happens here in the Kittur area of Belagavi, where education pathways are shaped by uneven access and patchy facilities. Instead of broad claims, numbers tell part of the story through patterns found in how people feel supported at home. Feelings matter, advice matters, even small daily help makes a difference when exams loom close. What emerges isn’t about fixing broken systems overnight but noticing quiet strengths already present. Emotional backing from relatives often softens the sharp edges of classroom fear. Information shared during tough weeks changes how challenges are met. Even practical aid - like managing time or resources - shifts what seems possible under strain. Behind grades lie unseen battles; behind coping lies connection. Though worries run high among country students - tied to speaking differences, new teaching styles, and feeling behind city classmates - a steady anchor shows up at home. Where parents might not guide homework because they never studied much themselves, care and belief in their children still build inner strength. This work steps into empty space left by past studies, asking what exact kinds of family actions quiet racing thoughts or tense bodies in these young adults. Answers here help teachers and leaders shape responses rooted in real life, ones that let learning grow steadily and careers take root - even far from cities. Key Words: Academic Anxiety, Rural Students, Family Backdrop
Tolagi et al. (Wed,) studied this question.