Report Card Comments for Struggling Students — Free Examples
Finding the right words for a struggling student is one of the hardest parts of report writing. Comments need to be honest, supportive, and actionable — never discouraging. This free tool gives you ready-to-use report card comments for struggling students across every subject and year group. Filter by scenario, choose between a constructive or direct tone, type the student’s name, and copy. Every comment is written to help, not harm.
Report Card Comments for Struggling Students — Examples
The comments below are a sample from the tool above. They cover the two most common tones teachers need for struggling students: constructive (supportive, solution-focused) and direct (plain, honest). All comments can be personalised with a student name using the tool above.
Constructive — Progress & Effort
- The student is working towards expectations and with continued focus, further improvement is achievable.
- The student would benefit from reviewing key concepts to strengthen understanding.
- The student has the ability to achieve more and would benefit from a more consistent approach to their studies.
- With increased effort, the student would make significantly stronger progress.
- The student is encouraged to approach tasks with a more open and positive mindset.
- The student sometimes needs encouragement to persevere when tasks become challenging.
- The student would benefit from developing greater resilience when encountering difficult work.
- Regular completion of Maths homework would help the student consolidate skills taught in class.
- The student would benefit from widening their reading to support vocabulary and comprehension development.
- Reading at home more regularly would have a significant positive impact on the student’s progress.
Constructive — Focus & Participation
- The student needs to focus more consistently during lessons.
- Improved concentration will help the student better understand key concepts.
- The student would benefit from minimising distractions during class time.
- The student is capable but needs to maintain attention more consistently.
- The student should contribute more actively during class discussions.
- The student would benefit from sharing ideas more confidently.
- The student is encouraged to take a more active role in classroom activities.
Direct — Progress & Homework
- The student is currently performing below expectations and needs improvement.
- The student has made limited progress this term.
- The student is not yet meeting the expected standard.
- The student needs to demonstrate greater understanding of key concepts.
- The student frequently fails to complete homework assignments.
- Homework is often missing or incomplete.
- The student is not putting in the effort needed to make adequate progress.
- The student has the ability to succeed but is not applying the necessary effort to do so.
Tips for Writing Report Card Comments for Struggling Students
Writing comments for struggling students is the most delicate part of report card season. Done well, they give parents a clear picture and students a real path forward. Done badly, they discourage without helping. These principles make the difference.
Every struggling student has at least one real strength — find it and name it first. Specific praise lands differently than generic praise. “Works hard in group activities” means more than “tries their best.”
Write about the behaviour or skill, not the person. “Reading fluency needs development” is more useful and less damaging than “is a poor reader.” Parents respond better and students recover faster.
A concern without a suggestion is just a complaint. Every constructive comment should end with one clear, practical action — reading at home, completing homework routinely, asking for help when stuck.
Use Constructive for students who are trying but struggling. Use Direct when the issue is effort or responsibility rather than ability. The wrong tone for the wrong student causes real harm.
“Needs to try harder,” “lazy,” “disruptive,” “behind.” These describe without helping. Replace with specific behaviours and what support is in place — parents need to know what the school is doing too.
If a student’s situation is significantly concerning, a parent–teacher conversation should happen before the report card arrives. The report card should confirm what’s already been discussed, not deliver a shock.
Related Report Card Comment Pages
Looking for comments for a different type of student or a specific subject? These pages have comments filtered and written for each situation.
Frequently Asked Questions
How to Write Report Card Comments for Struggling Students
Writing report card comments for struggling students is the most delicate part of the whole report card process. The stakes are real — a poorly worded comment can discourage a child, alienate a parent, or damage the trust a teacher has spent months building. A well-written one can do the opposite: give a family clarity, give a student a concrete next step, and show that their teacher sees them as more than their grades.
The starting point is understanding what a comment for a struggling student actually needs to do. It is not there to summarise what the grade already shows. The grade tells parents the outcome. The comment needs to explain the pattern behind it, acknowledge what the student is doing, and point to what can change. That is a much harder job than simply describing a result, and it is why so many teachers find these comments the most time-consuming to write.
Start with something real
Every struggling student has at least one genuine strength — something they do well, an attitude they bring, a moment of progress. Find it and name it specifically. Vague openers like “tries hard” or “a pleasure to have in class” read as filler. Something like “responds well to one-to-one support” or “shows real effort during group activities” tells a parent something true about their child that the grade cannot.
Name the difficulty without labelling the student
There is a significant difference between describing a behaviour and labelling a person. “Finds sustained focus during independent tasks challenging” describes something observable and changeable. “Lacks concentration” describes a fixed personality trait. Parents respond very differently to these two phrasings — and so do students who read their own reports years later. Always write about what you observe, not what you conclude about character.
Give one clear next step
The most useful report card comments for struggling students end with something actionable — one specific thing the student, parent, or school will do differently. Not a list of everything that needs to improve. One thing. “Reading aloud at home for ten minutes each evening would significantly support progress in class” is something a parent can act on tonight. “Needs to improve reading” is not.
Choose the right tone for the right student
The tool above offers three tones relevant to struggling students. Constructive is for students who are genuinely trying but finding the work difficult — the language is supportive and solution-focused. Direct is for situations where the barrier is effort or responsibility rather than ability — these comments say plainly what needs to change without sugarcoating. Encouraging is for students who are below expectations but showing real progress — the focus is on movement, not the gap. Choosing the wrong tone for the wrong student is one of the most common report card mistakes, and one of the most damaging.
Report Card Comment Examples for Struggling Students
The examples below show what good constructive, direct, and encouraging comments look like in practice. Each is written to be specific, honest, and useful — not just a filler sentence that could apply to any student. Use the tool above to find the right version for your student’s specific situation, subject, and year group.
What to Avoid When Writing These Comments
The difference between a comment that helps and one that harms often comes down to specific word choices. Here are the most common mistakes teachers make when writing report card comments for struggling students — and how to reframe them.
Six Tips for Getting These Comments Right
If a student’s difficulties are significant, the report card should confirm a conversation, not start one. Parents who receive a concerning comment out of nowhere feel blindsided — and that emotion gets directed at the school. A brief conversation beforehand changes everything.
Teachers often try to pack every concern into one comment. Resist this. One specific, actionable suggestion is more useful than five vague ones. Parents can act on “read aloud for ten minutes each evening.” They cannot act on “needs to improve across the board.”
Parents of struggling students want to know what the school is doing, not just what the child needs to do. One sentence — “targeted support is in place” or “we are working with [Name] on this in small group sessions” — changes the tone of the whole comment.
A comment that is entirely negative leaves parents with nowhere to go. Even one genuine strength, named specifically, gives the family something to focus on and signals that you see their child as a whole person, not just a set of deficits.
Longer comments are not more compassionate — they are often harder to read and easier to misinterpret. Two to three focused sentences is the right length. If there is more to say, it belongs in a meeting, not a comment box.
Before submitting, read the comment as if you are the parent receiving it. Ask: Does this help me understand my child? Does it give me something to do? Does it make me feel like the teacher is on our side? If the answer to any of these is no, rewrite it.
Frequently Asked Questions
More Report Card Comment Tools
Need comments for a different type of student or a specific subject? Each page below has its own filtered set of comments written for that situation.