How High Schools Are Using Sports Psychology to Support Student Athletes

From sideline coaching to breathing techniques, schools are integrating preventative mental skills training into athletics programs nationwide.

By Alexis MeyersReviewed by SportsPsychology.org TeamUpdated June 17, 202624 min read
Sports Psychology in High Schools: Boosting Athlete Mental Health

What you’ll learn in this article…

  • Arsenal Technical High School’s football team practices mental skills like deep breathing through a Riley Children’s Health pilot.
  • Suicide has been a leading cause of death among youth for the past decade, according to the Indiana Youth Institute.
  • High schools can implement sports psychology programs for $100 to $250 per hour by partnering with local providers.

How can a school protect its student athletes from rising adolescent anxiety and depression? For a decade, suicide has been a leading cause of death among youth in Indiana. Most schools still treat mental performance as an afterthought. At Indianapolis's Arsenal Technical High School, a mental resiliency program with Riley Children's Health is embedding sports psychology into football training for up to 100 athletes. Early results show that preventative skills like deep breathing and identity work can alter anxiety before it escalates. The model is catching on, reshaping what student support looks like.

What Is Sports Psychology in a High School Setting?

Sports psychology at the high school level is not a watered-down version of what pros use. It is a distinct practice tailored to adolescents building their identity both on and off the field.

A Preventative Skill Set, Not Therapy

High school sports psychology focuses on proactive mental skills training, not clinical treatment. Think breathing techniques, visualization, goal-setting, and stress management exercises that help athletes regulate emotions during competition and beyond. The priority is equipping teens with tools they can use immediately: calming pre-game jitters, refocusing after a mistake, or balancing sports with academic pressure. While a psychologist on a high school campus may also provide therapy, the sports psychology initiative emphasizes skill-building over diagnosis.

How It Differs from College and Pro Settings

Younger athletes face a different developmental landscape. Their identity is still forming, making it risky to tie self-worth entirely to athletic performance. High school programs deliberately address "identity beyond sports" by encouraging students to explore academics, hobbies, and relationships outside the team. In contrast, college and pro models often prioritize performance optimization and career longevity. High school efforts also operate with less specialization: a single mental performance consultant might serve multiple sports, whereas a Division I program may assign a dedicated consultant to each team.

Who Delivers These Services

These programs are led by licensed psychologists or Certified Mental Performance Consultants (CMPCs), not coaches. While coaches reinforce skills during practice, the design and direct delivery of mental training comes from professionals trained in sport psychology. This distinction maintains ethical boundaries and ensures that athletes receive evidence-based guidance.

The Core Goal: Coping Tools Before Crisis

The central mission is prevention. By normalizing mental skills conversations early, schools aim to reduce anxiety, depression, and burnout before they escalate. A student who learns controlled breathing in ninth grade carries that ability into tryouts, exams, and personal setbacks. The goal is not to wait for a breakdown but to build a psychological foundation that supports performance and well-being throughout adolescence.

Why Preventative Mental Skills Training Matters: Teen Athlete Mental Health by the Numbers

For the past decade, suicide has been a leading cause of death among young people, a sobering finding from the Indiana Youth Institute that underscores the urgency of addressing mental health in schools. Nationally, the 2023 Youth Risk Behavior Survey from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) revealed that nearly 40% of high school students experienced persistent sadness or hopelessness, a red flag for depression. More than one in five seriously considered suicide, and 9% made an attempt. These aren't distant statistics; they represent classmates, teammates, and friends.

A Growing Crisis: National Statistics on Teen Mental Health

The numbers paint a picture of widespread distress. In 2023, 28.5% of high school students reported poor mental health most of the time, and 20.4% had suicidal thoughts. Among adolescents ages 12 to 17, anxiety symptoms affect nearly 20%, while depressive symptoms impact 18%, according to data from the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry (AACAP). Suicide is now the second leading cause of death for youth aged 10-14 and young adults 15-24, per the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention. These trends have been building for years, with the CDC noting that from 2011 to 2021, feelings of hopelessness rose by over 40% among high school students.

The Silent Struggle of Student Athletes

While comprehensive, athlete-specific research at the high school level is still emerging, initial findings suggest that student athletes are not immune, and may face unique pressures. The NCAA's ongoing student-athlete well-being studies indicate that rates of anxiety and depression among college athletes mirror the general student population, and early data hints that high school athletes experience similar or even elevated stress. The pressure to perform, maintain a recruiting profile on social media, and balance rigorous academics can create a relentless mental load. For many teens, their athletic identity becomes so consuming that an injury or a bad game feels catastrophic. Burnout is a real threat: the National Federation of State High School Associations has flagged sport specialization and year-round competition as contributors to emotional exhaustion.

The Power of Prevention: Building Skills Before the Breaking Point

Reactive mental health care, waiting until a crisis occurs, is both costly and less effective than teaching coping skills early. Programs like the Arsenal Tech-Riley Children's Health pilot are shifting the model to proactive prevention. Students learn deep breathing, cognitive reframing, and stress management techniques that they can use on and off the field. The CDC emphasizes that school-connectedness and supportive relationships are protective factors against suicide, and sports psychology interventions directly build those connections. By embedding mental resiliency training into athletics, schools can reach students who might never seek help on their own. The return on investment is hard to quantify, but reduced emergency room visits, improved academic performance, and healthier young adults are clear downstream benefits.

The Youth Mental Health Crisis in Numbers

These numbers from the CDC highlight why high schools are increasingly turning to sports psychology programs. With student athletes facing the same mental health challenges as their peers, early intervention through mental skills training is becoming a priority.

Six mental health statistics for U.S. adolescents: 40% persistent sadness, 20% suicide consideration, 20% anxiety symptoms, 18% depression symptoms, 20% unmet mental health needs, and suicide among top three causes of death. Sources: CDC, 2023.

Inside the Arsenal Tech–Riley Children's Health Pilot Program

The mental resiliency pilot program at Arsenal Technical High School is proving that sports psychology can be woven directly into the fabric of a high school athletics program, changing the way student athletes learn to manage pressure.1

A Groundbreaking School-Health Partnership

The program was launched by Arsenal Tech in collaboration with Riley Children's Health, and it was co-created by Dr. Elaine Gilbert, a pediatric psychologist. Dr. Gilbert has worked directly with the school for two years as of March 2026, building trust and understanding the unique pressures facing student athletes. This kind of embedded role is a growing example of youth sports psychologist work in action, and the partnership focuses on the football team to create a consistent presence of mental health support that remains rare in high school settings.

Program Structure: Year-Round Support for Football Players

The initiative is designed to meet athletes where they are, both during the season and beyond. During competition periods, between 60 and 75 students participate, while the offseason sees a core group of 30 to 50 players staying engaged. Summer conditioning can involve up to 100 athletes. The structure ensures that mental skills are not treated as a one-time workshop but as an ongoing part of athletic development.

In the offseason, the program hosts monthly meetings. These sessions are not dry lectures; they cover practical topics like sportsmanship, overall wellness, and exploring identity outside of sports. For teenagers who often define themselves by their athletic performance, this identity work is especially valuable. It aligns with the growing recognition that student athlete mental health resources must help young people build a sense of self that survives wins and losses.

Real-Time Coaching from the Sideline

What sets this program apart is the sideline coaching model. Dr. Gilbert does not stay in a clinic. She attends games and coaches psychology in real time from the sideline. This applied approach lets her observe stress responses as they happen and offer immediate tools, such as deep breathing or finger-counting exercises. For a player who has just made a mistake on the field, having a trusted psychologist nearby to help reset can be far more effective than a post-game talk. If you are curious about what that kind of applied work looks like day to day, our guide on what does a sports psychologist do offers a closer look.

Athletic Buy-In: Coach Moorman's Role

A program like this cannot succeed without buy-in from athletics leadership, and that is exactly what it received. Head football coach Steve Moorman, who joined Arsenal Tech in 2026, has been a vocal supporter. His willingness to integrate mental skills into the team culture signals to players that this work is as important as physical training. When the coaching staff and a pediatric psychologist collaborate, student athletes get a consistent message: your mind matters just as much as your body.

The Arsenal Tech model, as profiled by Mirror Indy, is generating interest far beyond Indianapolis.1 It demonstrates that high school sports psychology can be preventative, accessible, and immediately practical.

Other High Schools Leading the Way in Sports Psychology

The Arsenal Tech pilot is one piece of a broader national shift: high schools are increasingly embedding mental skills training into athletics. From peer-led advocacy chapters to hospital-school partnerships, programs are taking root across the country, each adapting a core set of evidence-based techniques to their local context.

Morgan’s Message and The Hidden Opponent: Peer-Led Advocacy

Two national organizations illustrate how student-driven mental health education is scaling. Morgan’s Message, a nonprofit founded to honor a student-athlete lost to suicide, runs an Ambassador Program that establishes school chapters. These chapters train student leaders to facilitate conversations, share resources, and reduce stigma among their teammates. While specific chapter locations are not publicly tracked at the school level, the program has gained traction in athletic conferences across Texas, California, and the Midwest. Similarly, The Hidden Opponent, started by former USC volleyball athlete Victoria Garrick Browne, empowers Campus Captains to lead advocacy and wellness events. Though originally collegiate, the model is extending into high schools, normalizing mental health as part of athletic identity.

Hospital-School Partnerships: Clinical Expertise on Campus

Beyond peer initiatives, a growing number of children’s hospitals are placing sport psychologists directly in high school athletic programs. These partnerships typically run in one- to two-month blocks, with three to six sessions per team. A mental performance consultant often attends one weekly practice to deliver a 10- to 20-minute mental skills block, breathing exercises, visualization, or goal-setting. Over a year, a single program can reach roughly 100 student-athletes. This model, seen in regions from Florida to the Midwest, mirrors the Arsenal Tech structure: a credentialed provider embedded within the athletic department, with coach buy-in from the start.

Common Threads: What Successful Programs Share

Across case studies, effective high school sport psychology programs exhibit three traits. First, they rely on partnerships with external experts, university training clinics or pediatric health systems, to supply licensed professionals. Second, they secure head coach endorsement, which signals to athletes that mental skills are as important as physical conditioning. Third, they normalize short, regular practice touchpoints rather than one-off crisis interventions. This preventative rhythm builds trust and makes mental performance a routine part of sport.

The Policy Landscape: No State Mandates Yet

Despite these grassroots efforts, no state athletic association currently mandates mental health training for student-athletes, unlike concussion management, where all 50 states have laws. Advocacy groups are pushing for change, but for now, adoption depends on local leadership. Schools looking to start a program often turn to graduate programs like the University of Denver’s MA in Sport & Performance Psychology or the University of Western States’ MS in Sport Performance Psychology, which train practitioners ready to work in educational settings.

Core Techniques Schools Are Teaching Student Athletes

Schools are beginning to treat mental skills the same way they treat physical drills: as teachable, repeatable, and essential for performance. In group settings, often during practice or team meetings, student athletes are learning practical techniques that help them manage pressure, stay focused, and build a healthy sense of self. These are not therapy sessions, they are structured, age-appropriate skills woven into the fabric of the athletic program.

Deep Breathing and Finger Counting for In-The-Moment Calm

When a high-pressure moment hits, the body’s fight-or-flight response can hijack performance. Deep breathing, slowly inhaling through the nose, holding, and exhaling longer than the inhale, activates the parasympathetic nervous system, lowering heart rate and quieting the mind. Players are taught to use this between plays, during timeouts, or before a big serve. Similarly, finger counting is a discreet grounding technique: the athlete touches each fingertip to the thumb in sequence, focusing on the tactile sensation. It works by redirecting attention away from anxious thoughts and into the present. The Arsenal Tech program specifically incorporates deep breathing and finger counting to help football players manage stress on the sidelines and in the huddle. Like any athletic drill, these techniques are practiced regularly so they become automatic when needed.

Visualization and Mental Rehearsal Before Competition

Visualization is more than daydreaming; it’s a structured mental rehearsal that mirrors physical practice. A basketball player might see herself sinking free throws, a wrestler might run through a perfect takedown, all in vivid detail, the sounds, the movements, the emotional control. This technique works because the brain activates many of the same neural pathways used during actual performance. When done the night before a game or during a quiet moment in the locker room, it primes the athlete for success and builds confidence. Coaches often guide the entire team through a visualization script, making it a shared routine that normalizes mental preparation.

Positive Self-Talk to Reframe Pressure

The inner monologue can make or break performance. Athletes learn to catch negative thoughts, “I always choke in this situation”, and replace them with constructive, specific cues like “smooth follow-through” or “I’ve trained for this.” This isn’t empty cheerleading; it’s a cognitive skill that redirects focus from fear to process. Teams practice it in drills, with coaches prompting players to verbalize their cues aloud, turning self-talk into a collective norm. Over time, the athlete’s default mental script shifts from doubt to composure.

Identity Work: Who Am I Beyond the Game?

One of the most forward-thinking aspects of these programs is helping teenagers see themselves as more than athletes. Through monthly offseason discussions, Arsenal Tech players explore interests, values, and goals outside of football, topics like sportsmanship, wellness, and life after sports. Guided journaling prompts and group conversations encourage students to articulate their strengths beyond the field. This identity work acts as a protective factor: when an athlete has a multifaceted sense of self, a bad game or an injury doesn’t shatter their psyche. It’s a skill that builds long-term resilience, and just like a new play, it takes practice to internalize.

These techniques are not reserved for elite athletes or crisis moments. They are everyday mental fitness tools, taught in the same team-first environment as a conditioning drill, and they represent a quiet revolution in how high schools support the whole student.

How Schools Can Implement a Sports Psychology Program

A school-based sport psychology consultant typically charges between $100 and $250 per hour, with full-day workshops ranging from $1,500 to over $3,500. Building a program from scratch might sound expensive, but a growing number of schools are finding creative ways to embed mental skills training into their athletic culture, often for far less than the cost of a single assistant coach position.

Staffing Models: Finding the Right Fit

Schools have several options for adding sport psychology services, each with distinct trade-offs.

  • Full-time hire: Brings consistent on-campus presence and deep integration with teams. Costs are higher, salaries for school psychologists already range from $60,000 to $95,000 per year, and the role may need to be blended with counseling or teaching duties.
  • Partnership with a children’s hospital or university: Taps into existing clinical expertise and graduate training programs. Often lower direct cost to the school, but scheduling can be less flexible and the consultant may split time across multiple sites.
  • Private practice retention: A retainer model (commonly $1,000 to $5,000 per month) gives access to a certified professional without adding headcount. Ideal for schools wanting a season-long engagement with monthly check-ins.

Credentialing for School-Based Practitioners

Anyone delivering mental performance services in a school should hold appropriate credentials. The gold standard is the Certified Mental Performance Consultant (CMPC) from the Association for Applied Sport Psychology (AASP). Earning the CMPC requires a master’s or doctoral degree, at least 400 hours of mentored experience (200 of which must be direct client contact), and passing a 90-minute exam. The application fee is $375, and the credential is accredited by the National Commission for Certifying Agencies (NCCA).

If the consultant is also a licensed psychologist working with minors, state licensure laws apply. In most states, this means a doctoral degree, supervised postdoctoral hours, and passage of the EPPP. Schools should verify that any external provider carries liability insurance and understands school-specific confidentiality rules.

Funding the Program

Costs need not fall entirely on the school budget. Common funding sources include:

  • Booster clubs: Many programs are financed through athletic boosters, which see mental skills training as a competitive advantage.
  • Hospital partnerships: As in the Arsenal Tech–Riley Children’s Health pilot, a hospital may cover the consultant’s time as part of community outreach.
  • Title IV and grants: Federal funds for safe and healthy students can sometimes support preventative mental health initiatives.
  • University collaborations: Graduate programs in sport psychology often seek applied placements for their trainees at little or no cost to the site.

A Practical Season-Long Structure

Drawing on real-world models, a typical annual plan can be broken into three phases:

  • Pre-season workshops: A half-day or full-day workshop (roughly $500 to $3,500) introduces athletes to breathing techniques, goal setting, and team cohesion exercises.
  • In-season sideline support: The consultant attends practices and games to coach athletes through pressure moments, model self-regulation, and reinforce skills taught earlier.
  • Monthly offseason meetings: These group sessions (one per month) cover topics like identity beyond sports, sportsmanship, and wellness check-ins, mirroring the Arsenal Tech approach.

Navigating Confidentiality and Referrals

Schools must balance trust with duty of care. Under FERPA, counseling notes that are kept in a student’s official file or shared with school personnel are considered education records; however, “sole possession notes” that are kept private by the consultant and not disclosed to others are typically exempt. Parental consent is generally required for ongoing psychological services with minors, except in emergency or crisis situations.

A clear referral protocol is essential. Sport psychology work focuses on performance and mental skills, but when a student shows persistent depressed mood, self-harm, suicidal ideation, or disordered eating, the consultant must activate district crisis procedures and connect the student to licensed clinical care. Establishing an upfront plan with administrators and parents ensures that athletes get the right level of support at the right time.

Steps to Launch a High School Sports Psychology Program

Most successful programs start small, often with a single team, and expand after demonstrating measurable improvements in student-athlete well-being and performance. The following steps outline a structured approach for high schools to integrate sports psychology support.

Six-step process to launch a high school sports psychology program, from securing stakeholder buy-in to evaluating and expanding.

Recognizing Warning Signs and the Role of Parents and Coaches

What signs should coaches and parents watch for in student athletes that might indicate mental health concerns?

Observable Red Flags in Student Athletes

Coaches and parents see student athletes nearly every day, often in high-pressure environments. That visibility can reveal early signals that something is off. Warning signs that deserve attention include sudden performance drops that can't be explained by injury or normal fatigue, withdrawal from teammates during practice or social events, noticeable changes in sleep or appetite (sleeping much more or much less, skipping meals, or binge eating), and increased irritability or anger that seems out of proportion to the situation. Other worrying indicators: loss of passion for the sport they once loved, persistent self-criticism that goes beyond typical disappointment, giving away prized sports equipment, or statements that suggest hopelessness about the future.

When Stress Becomes a Disorder: Distinguishing Normal Competition Anxiety

Competitive pressure is part of sports, and some nervousness before a game is expected. But there's a clear difference between everyday stress and a clinical concern. Use this framework: if the signs above persist for two weeks or longer, and if they begin to impair everyday functioning, struggling to get out of bed, failing classes, isolating even from family, then the distress has likely crossed a line. A key threshold is when the student's reaction prevents them from doing what they normally could do; for example, overwhelming anxiety that triggers panic attacks during practice or refusal to attend team events. Coaches and parents don't need to diagnose, but they need to recognize that a pattern of persistent, impairing symptoms is not just a character flaw or lack of grit.

How to Start the Conversation: Referral Pathways and Breaking Stigma

Athletes are often reluctant to self-report due to fear of being seen as weak or losing playing time. Coaches can normalize mental health by speaking openly about it as another facet of athletic performance, just like strengthening a muscle. If a coach notices red flags, the first step is usually a private, compassionate conversation with the athlete: express specific, caring observations and listen without judgment. The next step is to loop in the school counselor or athletic trainer, who can connect the student with a sport psychology professional or a mental health provider. In programs like the Arsenal Tech pilot, a dedicated psychologist is already embedded, making referrals seamless. When parents need to be involved, the coach or counselor should outline their concerns calmly, focusing on the student's well-being, and suggest a joint meeting with the student. Privacy is crucial; share only what is necessary to get support.

The Parent Factor: Pressure, Recruiting, and Supportive Involvement

Parents can unknowingly contribute to an athlete’s mental load. Over-involvement, critiquing every performance, emphasizing scholarships over enjoyment, or treating the child’s sport as a family investment, can skyrocket anxiety and harm identity development. High school recruiting adds another layer: students may feel their entire future hinges on a single season. Instead, parents can support mental health by praising effort over outcome, encouraging a balance between academics and athletics, and affirming their child’s worth beyond sports. Simple check-ins like “How are you feeling about everything on your plate right now?” open the door to honest dialogue. When parents, coaches, and sport psychology professionals communicate openly as a team, the athlete hears consistent, supportive messages that shield them from stigma and isolation.

Career Pathways: Working in High School Sports Psychology

Clinical licensure versus sport psychology certification, aspiring practitioners face a fork in the road early in their training. Both paths lead into high school settings, but the credentials, scope of practice, and day-to-day roles differ significantly. This section maps out the education steps, the expanding job market, and where a career in high school sports psychology can take you.

The Education Pathway: Bachelor’s to Certification

Most future high school sport psychology professionals start with a bachelor’s in psychology, kinesiology, or a related field. From there, graduate training splits into two tracks: a master’s or doctoral degree focused on sport psychology and mental performance, or a clinical/counseling degree (such as an MA in counseling, MSW, or PhD in clinical psychology) with a sport psychology emphasis. The mental performance route often leads to the Certified Mental Performance Consultant® (CMPC) credential through the Association for Applied Sport Psychology. Clinical roles require state licensure, for example, as a licensed professional counselor, clinical social worker, or psychologist, which opens doors to diagnosing and treating mental health conditions alongside performance work. Many professionals hold both licences and CMPC, giving them the broadest scope in a high school environment.

A Growing Job Market Fueled by Youth Mental Health Needs

Demand is accelerating. As programs like the Arsenal Tech pilot in Indianapolis gain attention, more school districts are exploring dedicated sport psychology positions. The youth mental health crisis, with suicide as a leading cause of death among adolescents, has pushed institutions to invest in preventative support for student-athletes. K-12 job listings for mental performance coaches, wellness coordinators, and licensed therapists with sport expertise are rising, though competition varies by region. Schools often partner with local hospitals or universities, creating hybrid roles that blend clinical services and athletic department consulting.

Where Else Can You Work with Adolescent Athletes?

High schools are just one setting. Professionals also find roles with youth sports clubs, travel teams, collegiate athletic departments, and private practices specializing in teen athletes. Community mental health agencies and hospital-based sports medicine programs are additional employers, reflecting the wide application of sport psychology skills across youth development contexts.

Bridging to Your Degree and Career Goals

Whether you lean toward the mental performance path or the clinical route, the right degree and certification open doors. Explore our degree guides to compare online and campus programs, learn about CMPC supervised hours, and find internships that put you on the sidelines, literally or virtually, supporting the next generation of athletes.

Frequently Asked Questions About Sports Psychology in High Schools

Get clear answers to common questions about how sports psychology is being integrated into high school athletics, from what it looks like in practice to steps for implementation and supporting student mental health.

What is sports psychology in high school?
Sports psychology in high school applies mental skills training to help student athletes handle stress, build confidence, and improve focus. For example, the Arsenal Tech program with Riley Children’s Health teaches breathing exercises and identity exploration, making psychological support a routine part of athletics rather than an afterthought.
Is sports psychology in high demand?
Yes. With teen suicide a leading cause of death for a decade, schools increasingly view mental skills training as essential. The Arsenal Tech pilot exemplifies a proactive approach, and as more districts adopt similar models, the need for sports psychologists and trained coaches in high school settings continues to grow.
What are common mental health issues among high school athletes?
Anxiety, performance pressure, depression, and struggles with identity beyond sports are frequent. The demanding balance of school and competition can intensify these issues. Preventative programs like the one at Arsenal Tech give students coping techniques early, aiming to shift trajectories before mental health concerns escalate.
How can coaches recognize mental health warning signs in student athletes?
Coaches should note sudden behavior shifts: moodiness, withdrawal, declining performance, or negative self-talk. At Arsenal Tech, having a psychologist on the sidelines helps coaches learn to identify red flags. The key is to provide a safe space, listen without judgment, and guide students to professional resources when needed.
How can high schools implement a sports psychology program?
Partner with a mental health provider, designate a staff champion, and weave mental skills into regular team activities, like the monthly sessions and sideline coaching at Arsenal Tech. Seek funding through grants or district support, and start with one team to pilot, gather data, and expand gradually as success shows.
What role do parents play in supporting high school athlete mental health?
Parents can model healthy coping, avoid tying self-worth to athletic performance, and stay attuned to mood changes. In programs like Arsenal Tech’s, parental buy-in extends the impact: when families reinforce breathing techniques and open communication, student athletes feel a consistent support system that prioritizes their well-being over winning.

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