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50 % ALE Björn Axén -tuotteista 14.12. asti.

Pekrun, R., Lichtenfeld, S., Marsh, H. W., Murayama, K., & Goetz, T. (2017). Achievement emotions and academic performance: Longitudinal models of reciprocal effects. Child Development, 88 (5), 1653–1670.

Shahar, G., Elad-Strenger, J., & Henrich, C. C. (2011). Testing the vulnerability-stress model of depression in adolescence. Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 40 (12), 1641–1652.

Test anxiety is a well-documented phenomenon in educational psychology, but its comorbidity with depressive symptoms—referred to here as test-related depression and anxiety—represents a significant and often underappreciated mental health burden. This paper synthesizes current research on the prevalence, etiology, and consequences of test-induced internalizing disorders. It examines how chronic academic pressure can precipitate not only acute anxiety (worry, physiological arousal) but also persistent depressive symptoms (hopelessness, anhedonia, low self-worth). The paper further analyzes cognitive-behavioral models explaining this comorbidity, the impact on academic performance and long-term well-being, and evidence-based interventions, including cognitive restructuring, mindfulness, and systemic changes in assessment design. Findings suggest that test-related depression and anxiety are not merely transient study stressors but can become clinically significant conditions requiring multi-tiered institutional responses.

The Psychological Impact of Academic Evaluation: Examining Test-Related Depression and Anxiety in Student Populations

[Your Name] Institution: [Your University/Department] Course: [Course Name] Date: April 14, 2026 Abstract