There’s a particular kind of fear that happens in Maths exams. It’s not loud or dramatic – it’s silent, quick, and often invisible. A student sits down, reads the first question… and their mind goes blank.
“They say I’m fine at Maths. They’ve revised. But under pressure, something shuts down.”
This isn’t a Maths issue. It’s a thinking state issue – and it’s far more common than people realise. And there is an actual condition called Maths Anxiety.
In this blog, we’ll look at
- Why freezing happens
- What it looks like
- The psychology behind it
- The 3 second reset technique
- How parents can help at home
Why Freezing Happens
When a student feels judged, rushed, or afraid of failing, the brain enters a threat state. The brain shifts from slow, logical processing to fast, reactive processing. Psychologists describe this shift as moving from System 2 to System 1 thinking.
Here’s what that shift does:
- Working memory overloads, meaning the student loses the ability to hold and process information.
- Logical reasoning shuts down — sequencing steps and interpreting wording becomes harder.
- The student misreads the question, jumps to conclusions, or gets stuck.
- The brain stalls — freezing is a protective response to overload.
Signs of Freezing
Parents often recognise these behaviours:
- Shallow breathing
- Staring at the page
- Flipping pages quickly
- Erasing repeatedly
- Rubbing the forehead
- Whispering “I can’t remember”
- Writing very little or nothing
The 3 Second Reset Technique
When a student feels overwhelmed, they can silently do the following:
- Exhale slowly A long outbreath calms the nervous system.
- Drop the shoulders. Physical tension softens → mental tension softens.
- Read the question again — slowly Focus on only the first line, not the whole question.
- Ask: “What is this REALLY asking me?” This reactivates slower, analytical thinking. And importantly: They can repeat this reset as many times as needed, until their mind begins to settle.
Practical Exercise For Students (Use once per day for 1 week)
The Clarity Drill (2 minutes)
- Choose any short Maths question.
- Before answering, do the 3 Second Reset (breath, shoulders, slow read).
- Ask aloud: “What information do I have?”
- Then ask: “What is the first small step I could take?
How Parents Can Help
- Normalise freeze moments
- Encourage slower beginnings
- Praise clarity, not speed
- Reduce pressure
- Practise the rest together
Final Reassurance
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