CBT Workshop for College Students
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CBT for College Students

A logical framework to manage stress, expectations, and focus during academic years.

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Principle of CBT

Thoughts → Feelings → Behaviors. Changing one changes the rest.

Example: “I can’t do this” → Anxiety → Avoid work. Changing thought: “I’ll try small parts.”

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Behavioral Experiments

Test your assumptions instead of trusting fear blindly.

Example: Afraid of speaking? Try one question in class and notice reactions.

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Checklist Method

Break big tasks into small steps and tick them off.

Example: Thesis → research, outline, draft intro. Each tick = less stress.

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Diary Method

Record thoughts to identify patterns that fuel stress.

Example: Writing “I panic at night before exams” shows when to plan better.

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Exposure Therapy

Face fears gradually, instead of avoiding them.

Example: Afraid of networking? Start with one hello, then small talk, then group events.

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Challenging Thoughts

Use logic: test if your thought is fact or assumption.

Example: “I’ll fail this exam” → Check past scores, prep hours, feedback.

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Facing It

Avoidance strengthens fear; direct exposure weakens it.

Example: Instead of skipping labs, attend with a supportive friend.

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Logical Self-Talk

Replace emotional reactions with rational responses.

Example: “I messed up once → I’m a failure” → Reframe: “One mistake doesn’t define me.”

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Peer Pressure

CBT helps you see if choices align with your values, not fear.

Example: Friends push you to party before exams. Rational thought: “One night of fun ≠ worth risking grades.”

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Family Struggles

External stress is real, but coping responses are your choice.

Example: Financial worry → Instead of panic, make budget + seek part-time job.

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Expectations

Distinguish controllable effort from uncontrollable outcomes.

Example: Can control study hours, not exact grades.

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Boundaries

Protect your time and energy by saying “no” logically.

Example: Declining extra projects when midterms are close.

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Routine & Habits

Consistent schedules reduce uncertainty and stress.

Example: Fixed 30-min reading before bed instead of late-night scrolling.

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Smoking & Drinking

Short-term escape, long-term stress amplifier.

Example: Using drinks to calm nerves before viva → worsens anxiety next day.

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Goal Setting

Both short-term and long-term goals provide balance.

Example: Short-term: finish project this week. Long-term: internship in chosen field.

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Distraction vs Focus

Some breaks refresh; constant distraction drains progress.

Example: 15-min walk break helps; 4 hours on reels avoids responsibility.

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Support Systems

Seeking help is rational, not weakness.

Example: Asking senior guidance on projects saves weeks of trial-and-error.

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Reality Check

Differentiate fact from perception.

Example: “Everyone understands this but me” → Fact check with peers: many are confused too.

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Summary

CBT = logical self-analysis, evidence-based coping, and gradual facing of stressors.

Example: From “I’ll fail” → “I’ll test, track, and adapt my study plan.”