You're Not Alone: What Every Student Parent Should Know About Mental Health Support on Campus
If you're raising children while pursuing your degree, you're part of a community that includes more than 20% of all undergraduate students in the United States. You're juggling coursework, parenting, often employment, and trying to hold it all together. This guide breaks down new research on what student parents face and, more importantly, what you can do about it.
The Real Numbers Behind Your Experience
You already know this life is challenging. Now there's data to back up what you feel every day:
43% of student parents report feeling stressed all or most of the time
40% report feeling overwhelmed
38% have considered dropping out in the past 30 days alone
4 in 10 describe attending school while parenting as extremely or very challenging
If any of this sounds familiar, know this: these feelings are normal responses to an extraordinary situation. You're not failing; you're managing an incredible load.
What's Really Driving the Stress
The research identified several key pressure points that hit student parents harder than their peers:
Financial strain is real. Student parents are twice as likely to describe their finances as "always stressful" compared to students without children. You're more likely to have trouble paying rent, utilities, and basic bills. Nearly 1 in 5 student parents often worry about running out of food.
Time is your scarcest resource. Between childcare, coursework, and often full-time employment, managing your schedule can feel impossible. Nearly 20% of student parents find time management "difficult" and another 11% find it "very difficult."
The guilt is pervasive. Research participants described constant tension between being present for their children and succeeding academically. As one student put it: "There is a lot of gray area surrounding neglecting family in the present to secure time with them in the future."
You may feel invisible on campus. Student parents consistently report feeling disconnected from campus life and less welcome than their peers. More than half report having at least one experience where a faculty member was unsympathetic to their situation.
The Good News: You Have Protective Factors
Here's something the research found that might surprise you: being a parent actually provides some mental health advantages.
Lower rates of substance misuse. Student parents report significantly less problematic drinking than non-parents. Only 16% report being drunk the last time they drank alcohol, compared to 40% of students without children.
Lower rates of suicidal thinking. Parenting students report being less likely to have seriously considered suicide than non-parents.
A sense of purpose. Older student parents (25+) in particular report stronger feelings that they lead purposeful and meaningful lives, that they contribute to others' well-being, and that they feel competent in what matters to them.
You seek help when you need it. Student parents actually interact more frequently with academic advisors and faculty than their peers. You're already doing the work of asking for support.
Practical Steps You Can Take Right Now
1. Find Your People
The research is clear: connection matters for mental health, and student parents often feel isolated. Look for:
Parent support groups on campus or through student services
Online communities of student parents at your institution
Mentorship programs that pair younger student parents with those who have more experience
If these don't exist at your school, consider starting one. Other student parents are likely looking for the same connection.
2. Know What's Available
Many student parents don't know about resources their schools already offer. Investigate:
Campus childcare options (and waitlists, so get on them early)
Emergency financial assistance for unexpected expenses
Food pantries on or near campus
Lactation rooms if you're a nursing parent
Family-friendly study spaces in libraries or student centers
Counseling services (even if you think they won't understand your situation)
3. Ask for Flexibility
You're entitled to reasonable accommodations. Consider discussing these with professors:
Virtual attendance options when childcare falls through
Flexible deadline policies for family emergencies
Recording lectures so you can catch up if you miss class
Virtual office hours that fit your schedule
Many professors are understanding once they know your situation. The key is communicating early and clearly.
4. Prioritize Your Mental Health
If you're struggling, you're not alone and help is available:
Start with your campus counseling center. Even if past experiences haven't been ideal, many campuses are working to better understand non-traditional student needs.
Be honest about what you need. Tell counselors about your parenting responsibilities so they can provide relevant support.
Look into community mental health resources if campus services don't feel like the right fit.
Use crisis resources if you're in immediate distress. The 988 Suicide and Crisis Lifeline is available 24/7.
5. Be Strategic About Time
Since time management is one of the biggest challenges:
Prioritize class registration to build a schedule that works with childcare and work
Take advantage of asynchronous courses when available
Create study schedules that account for your actual life, not an idealized version
Accept that "good enough" is sometimes the goal
What You Can Advocate For
Student parents who came before you have fought for better conditions, and there's still work to do. If you have capacity to advocate, push for:
Better data collection so your school actually knows how many student parents it serves
Training for faculty and staff on the unique challenges you face
Expanded childcare options, including co-op models and subsidy programs
Policy changes that treat family emergencies like student illnesses in attendance policies
Representation in campus materials so future student parents know they belong
A Note for Younger Student Parents
If you're a student parent under 25, the research found you may face additional challenges. Younger student parents reported higher rates of anxiety, depression, feelings of isolation, and problematic drinking compared to older student parents.
This isn't a character flaw; it's a reflection of having fewer resources and less time to develop coping strategies. If you're in this group, be especially intentional about:
Connecting with older student parent mentors
Using mental health resources proactively
Building your support network early
Asking for help before you're in crisis
The Bottom Line
Being a student parent is hard. The research confirms what you already know. But it also confirms that you can succeed, that your parenting can actually be a source of strength and purpose, and that you deserve support along the way.
You're not alone, even when it feels that way. More than one in five of your fellow students are in the same boat. Find them. Support each other. Advocate for what you need. And take care of yourself along the way.
Your children are watching you pursue your education. That matters.
This guide summarizes findings from "Improving Mental Health of Student Parents: A Framework for Higher Education," published by The Jed Foundation and Ascend at the Aspen Institute. The full report includes recommendations for college administrators and can be found at ascend.aspeninstitute.org.