A recent Finnish study offers important insights into how symptoms of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) in adolescence can shape academic performance, and even influence educational outcomes well into adulthood. Children and teens with ODD often show a pattern of angry, irritable moods, arguing with adults, and defying rules or requests. They may lose their temper easily, be quick to blame others for mistakes, and deliberately annoy people.
The researchers followed participants from the Northern Finland Birth Cohort of 1986, a large, population-based study. They looked at over 6,000 teens whose parents reported symptoms of ADHD and ODD when the children were 15–16 years old. The team then tracked their academic performance at age 16 and their highest level of education by age 32.
ADHD, ODD, and Academic Performance
ADHD is well-known for affecting school performance, often linked to difficulties with attention, impulse control, and executive functioning. ODD, characterized by patterns of irritability, defiance, and hostility toward authority figures, is less studied in this context, especially when it appears without ADHD.
The study found that both disorders, whether occurring separately or in combination, were associated with poorer grades at age 16. However, teens with ADHD symptoms performed worse than those with only ODD symptoms. Interestingly, students with both ADHD and ODD symptoms had the most pronounced academic struggles, but their performance didn’t significantly differ from the ADHD-only group at that age.
Long-Term Educational Impact
By age 32, the effects were even more striking. Participants with both ADHD and ODD symptoms were the least likely to attend or graduate from higher education institutions. Only about 10% of them reached that level, compared to over 40% of those without these symptoms.
Even after accounting for other influences, such as parental education, family structure, and additional psychiatric conditions, the findings held. This suggests that the combination of ADHD and ODD symptoms in adolescence may uniquely disrupt the educational path.
For adolescent girls with ODD symptoms, the impact was particularly notable: they were significantly more likely to complete only the mandatory nine years of schooling.
Why This Matters
These results underscore the lasting effects that behavioral and emotional challenges in adolescence can have. While schools often focus on immediate academic outcomes, this study highlights the importance of early identification and support, not just for ADHD but for ODD as well.
Parents and educators play a crucial role in shaping future outcomes for children and adolescents with ADHD. Recognizing early signs of attention problems, emotional dysregulation, or defiance—and responding with appropriate interventions—could help redirect educational trajectories and open up opportunities down the line.
In short, it’s not just about managing classroom behavior. It’s about supporting long-term potential. When ADHD and ODD symptoms show up in adolescence, they don’t just make school harder—they can limit a student’s entire educational future. Early support and understanding can make a lasting difference.
Seppä S, Halt AH, Nordström T, Hurtig T. Effects of Symptoms of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) and Oppositional Defiant Disorder (ODD) on Academic Performance and Educational Attainment. Child Psychiatry Hum Dev. 2025 Jun;56(3):696-703. doi: 10.1007/s10578-023-01598-7. Epub 2023 Sep 1. PMID: 37658240; PMCID: PMC12095446.