Against the backdrop of an increasingly competitive contemporary education system, adolescents are experiencing significantly heightened academic stress. Understanding the mechanisms through which this stress affects their academic achievement has become a critical issue in educational psychology research. This paper employs a literature review methodology to focus on the core question of "the impact of adolescent academic stress on academic achievement." Grounded in the Yerkes-Dodson Law concerning the stress-performance relationship, and integrating social cognitive theory and adolescent developmental psychology characteristics, it explores the pathways through which academic stress operates across dimensions such as cognitive regulation, emotional responses, and behavioral performance. The paper proposes intervention strategies across three levels: at the family level, emphasizing supportive parenting and emotional communication; at the school level, optimizing evaluation systems and teacher support methods; and at the individual level, strengthening psychological regulation capabilities and learning strategy cultivation. The results indicate that effective management of adolescent academic stress not only promotes academic success but also provides practical pathways and theoretical support for fostering a healthy and positive educational ecosystem.
Shaobo Chai (Tue,) studied this question.