The Better Semester

Rob Danzman, MS, LCMHC

Rob Danzman is a licensed therapist who's worked with college students and their parents for over two decades. He's written two books: The Insider's Guide to Parenting: How to Solve Messy Problems and Build a Great Family and The Insider's Guide to College: Evidence-Based Tips, Tricks, and Strategies to Win the Semester. The Better Semester is an extension of his work and is all about providing info to parents of college students. Each episode if full of  insights, strategies and tactics - all super actionable advice to get your struggling college student solid again. How much is too much parenting when your kiddo heads off to school? How can college students find help when they're struggling? How should medication be handled while they're at college? How can parents coordinate with the university?All of these and more are covered weekly. 

  1. Title IX & College Risk: How Attorney Megan Ballard Mitchell Helps Families Protect Academic Futures, Scholarships & Student Rights

    JAN 19

    Title IX & College Risk: How Attorney Megan Ballard Mitchell Helps Families Protect Academic Futures, Scholarships & Student Rights

    In this episode, we sit down with Megan Ballard Mitchell, a prominent Title IX, education law, and criminal defense attorney who has helped countless students and families navigate some of the most stressful challenges in higher education. Megan draws on her unique experience as a former Attorney Advisor for the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights (OCR) and her strategic defense background to explain: 🔹 What Title IX allegations really mean for your student’s academic future — from suspension to lost scholarships and athletic eligibility. 🔹 Why high achieving families should pay attention to due process, evidence, and advocacy in campus hearings. 🔹 How Megan helps families protect educational opportunities at top universities, including navigating disciplinary hearings with confidence. 🔹 Practical advice for parents on preventing, preparing for, and responding to Title IX investigations. Whether your student is a freshman athlete, top scholar, or poised for graduate programs, this conversation is essential for every parent who wants to safeguard their child’s future in a world where one allegation can change everything. 👉 Check out Rob's blog for more expert insights on college legal risks, parental advocacy strategies, and protecting student prospects.  https://www.youtube.com/channel/motivatecounseling https://motivatecounseling.com/ https://motivatecounseling.com

    1h 47m
  2. Dr. Jessi Gold on Student Burnout, Perfectionism, and the Wellness Crisis

    JAN 12

    Dr. Jessi Gold on Student Burnout, Perfectionism, and the Wellness Crisis

    In this episode, Rob Danzman sits down with psychiatrist Dr. Jessi Gold, the first-ever Chief Wellness Officer for the University of Tennessee System and a nationally recognized expert in student mental health.  What You Will Learn in This Episode: The "Perfect Student" Trap: Why high-achieving students are experts at hiding mental health struggles until they reach a breaking point.Navigating Campus Health Systems: An insider’s guide to how university wellness centers work and how to ensure your student gets the right care.Burnout vs. Exhaustion: Dr. Gold explains the clinical difference and why "just taking a break" isn't always the cure.The Academic Pressure Cooker: Insights on resilience drawn from Dr. Gold's training at Yale and Stanford, and how to apply them to your student's journey.Emotional PPE: Tools for students entering high-stress fields (Medicine, Law, Engineering) to protect their mental well-being.Redefining Success: How to have hard conversations with your student about failure, perfectionism, and identity.About Dr. Jessi Gold: Dr. Jessi Gold is the author of How Do You Feel? One Doctor's Search for Humanity in Medicine. Dr. Gold is a regular contributor to the New York Times, The Atlantic, and NPR. She specializes in the mental health of college students, healthcare workers, and high-performance professionals. Connect with Dr. Gold: Book: How Do You Feel? One Doctor's Search for Humanity in MedicineWebsite: https://drjessigold.com/LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/jessi-gold-md-ms-14844bb/YouTube https://www.youtube.com/@drjessigoldInstagram https://www.instagram.com/drjessigold/?hl=enX https://twitter.com/drjessigoldShow Notes Love's Executioner: and Other Tales of Psychotherapy - Irvin Yalom https://www.youtube.com/channel/motivatecounseling https://motivatecounseling.com/ https://motivatecounseling.com

    1h 28m
  3. 08/20/2025

    College Freshman Transition: What Parents Need to Know (and Stop Doing)

    Sending your son or daughter off to college is more than just move-in day and tuition payments—it’s a developmental earthquake. Every pillar of their identity—academic, social, emotional, and financial—gets tested. For parents, especially high-achieving families, the transition can feel even more complicated: you want your child to succeed, stay safe, and thrive, but you also know you need to step back and let them grow. In this episode of The Better Semester, we walk parents through the evidence-based strategies that make the freshman year transition smoother and healthier—for both your student and your family. Drawing from current research, clinical experience, and real family vignettes, you’ll learn how to normalize struggles, redefine success, and communicate without conflict. What You’ll Learn in This Episode: ✅ Normalize the Struggle – Nearly 60% of college freshmen report overwhelming anxiety, and half struggle with depressive symptoms in their first semester. Instead of measuring success by whether your student is “happy,” shift the conversation: “What’s been most challenging this week, and how are you working through it?” This reduces pressure and builds resilience. ✅ Letting Go Without Losing Touch – Micromanaging signals “I don’t trust you.” Research shows helicopter parenting lowers resilience and problem-solving skills. Success in freshman year isn’t a 4.0 GPA—it’s learning self-advocacy, navigating setbacks, and being healthy enough to return sophomore year. ✅ Mental Health & Wellness Foundations – Sleep, nutrition, and social connection predict emotional health more than academics. Students who get fewer than 6 hours of sleep are twice as likely to experience depression. Parents can help by coaching, not managing—asking, “What’s your strategy for staying rested?” instead of nagging about bedtimes. ✅ Communication Without Conflict – Parents crave reassurance, students crave autonomy. Misalignment leads to guilt, resentment, and silence. The solution? A communication contract: set agreed-upon times for check-ins. Conversations thrive when parents use curiosity-based questions rather than constant check-ins or grade-tracking. ✅ Red Flags vs. Normal Struggles – It’s normal for students to feel homesick, stressed, or miss familiar food. But warning signs include withdrawal from friends, missed classes for more than a week, hopelessness, or talk of self-harm. Every parent should have three numbers saved before drop-off: campus counseling (CAPS), campus security, and student health services. Why This Matters for Parents Families with high expectations often place invisible pressure on students—academic perfection, social status, and career paths. By reframing success around resilience, independence, and emotional wellness, you’ll not only protect your child’s mental health but also prepare them to thrive in competitive environments. This is about raising resilient young adults who can manage setbacks, seek help, and grow stronger—not just check boxes on a résumé. Big Takeaways for Parents: Normalize the struggle.Redefine success as independence.Coach wellness instead of nagging.Create a communication contract.Know the red flags—and the resources.This episode gives you the practical playbook you wish you had before drop-off. Whether your student is attending a top-tier university, a competitive state school, or studying abroad, these tools help you stay connected while giving them the independence they need to grow. https://www.youtube.com/channel/motivatecounseling https://motivatecounseling.com/ https://motivatecounseling.com

    17 min
  4. 08/12/2025

    What Parents Need to Know about Counseling and Psychological Services on College Campuses

    Here’s your episode description, under 3,500 characters, written to match Scott Galloway’s tone while making it appealing for parents of college students in 2025: Episode Description Your kid’s college has a lifeboat they probably don’t even know exists — and you’ve already paid for it. It’s called CAPS (Counseling and Psychological Services), and in 2025, it might be the most undervalued part of your six-figure higher education investment. In this episode, we break down what CAPS is, what it isn’t, and why the math is brutal: overwhelming demand, under-resourced supply, and waitlists that stretch longer than your kid’s attention span. We’ll dive into the latest mental health data, reveal how many clinicians are actually on campus compared to the number of students in crisis, and explain why this matters for your kid’s chances of graduating. You’ll hear: The CAPS Backstory: From Princeton’s early “moral guidance” days to today’s hybrid teletherapy options.2025 Mental Health Reality Check: Anxiety, depression, and suicide stats that should have every parent paying attention.Clinician Ratios vs. Need: Why many schools have one counselor for every 2,000+ students — and what that means for care quality.University Case Studies: The gold standard at the University of Florida, small liberal arts success stories, and the under-resourced pressure cookers that look great in brochures but break down in reality.Medication Management: How ADHD meds, antidepressants, and mood stabilizers get handled (or dropped) on campus — and the questions parents need to ask before move-in day.Coordination with Disability Services & Faculty: How CAPS can secure academic accommodations, the paperwork your student must sign, and why professors are often the untrained first responders.Your 2025 Parent Playbook: A step-by-step plan for intake, releases of information, medication continuity, and making sure your student actually shows up to appointments.The bottom line? College isn’t just an academic experience — it’s an emotional obstacle course. CAPS isn’t perfect. It’s often underfunded, understaffed, and poorly marketed. But it’s the only parachute on campus you’ve already paid for. The real question is: will your kid pull the ripcord before they hit the ground? Whether you’re sending a freshman off for the first time or trying to help a junior who’s struggling, this episode will arm you with the inside knowledge, the right questions, and the practical strategies to make campus counseling actually work for your student. https://www.youtube.com/channel/motivatecounseling https://motivatecounseling.com/ https://motivatecounseling.com

    15 min
  5. 05/18/2025

    Getting the Most Out of Summer

    There's this pervasive, seductive myth of the endless summer among college students when spring semester finishes. Summer just feels long in the beginning, doesn't it? Three glorious months stretching out before your kiddo, promising unlimited possibilities. But here’s the harsh reality: it’s not. Without even an ounce of structure, without any guiding intent, those three months vanish—Poof! College students desperately need just enough planning, just enough forward-thinking, to avoid falling into the insidious trap of "I'll do it later." Because without even a little bit of foresight, without establishing some basic goals, later almost invariably becomes never. The days bleed into one another, and suddenly, it’s August, and nothing meaningful has been accomplished. So, given this potential for drift, what should your college kiddo be focusing on? I have six absolutely must-have summer habits for college students. These are not suggestions; they are non-negotiables. They are thoroughly research-backed principles for well-being. And they are, unequivocally, absolutely protective for mental health. I’ve broken them down in today's episode and I call them the Six Pillars of a Satisfying Summer. Not a catchy title but I think you'll like hearing how students can get the most out of summer (no matter how much is left). https://www.youtube.com/channel/motivatecounseling https://motivatecounseling.com/ https://motivatecounseling.com

    17 min

About

Rob Danzman is a licensed therapist who's worked with college students and their parents for over two decades. He's written two books: The Insider's Guide to Parenting: How to Solve Messy Problems and Build a Great Family and The Insider's Guide to College: Evidence-Based Tips, Tricks, and Strategies to Win the Semester. The Better Semester is an extension of his work and is all about providing info to parents of college students. Each episode if full of  insights, strategies and tactics - all super actionable advice to get your struggling college student solid again. How much is too much parenting when your kiddo heads off to school? How can college students find help when they're struggling? How should medication be handled while they're at college? How can parents coordinate with the university?All of these and more are covered weekly.