
Building Confidence as a Creative Student: Overcoming Imposter Syndrome at Delight
By Delight Technical College | Student Welfare & Wellbeing | 2026
One of the most common and least discussed challenges facing creative students is imposter syndrome: the persistent feeling that you are not as skilled, talented, or deserving of your place as those around you, despite evidence to the contrary. Creative fields are particularly susceptible to this phenomenon because creative quality feels subjective and personal in a way that, say, a mathematics result does not. At Delight Technical College, we take student confidence and wellbeing seriously recognising that technical training alone is not enough if a student does not believe in their own capability.
🧠 Why Creative Students Are Particularly Vulnerable
- Creative work feels deeply personal- criticism of the work can feel like criticism of the self
- Comparison is constant and visible- social media makes it easy to compare your unfinished work to others’ polished, curated output
- Creative skill development is non-linear- periods of visible progress are interspersed with frustrating plateaus that can feel like failure
- Subjective feedback can feel inconsistent or confusing- different tutors or clients may respond differently to the same work
💭 Recognising Imposter Syndrome
Common signs that a student may be experiencing imposter syndrome include:
- Attributing successes to luck rather than skill or effort
- Persistent fear of being ‘found out’ as not good enough
- Difficulty accepting praise or positive feedback
- Excessive comparison to peers, often focusing on their strengths and one’s own weaknesses
- Reluctance to share work or seek opportunities due to fear of inadequacy
🌱 How Delight Supports Student Confidence
Structured, Constructive Feedback:
Delight’s small class sizes enable tutors to give detailed, specific, constructive feedback focused on concrete skills and clear paths for improvement rather than vague or harsh judgment. Feedback that is specific and actionable builds confidence far more effectively than either empty praise or unstructured criticism.
Progressive Skill Building:
Delight’s modular curriculum is structured to build skills progressively ensuring students experience consistent, visible progress rather than being thrown into challenges beyond their developmental stage. Visible progress is one of the most powerful antidotes to imposter syndrome.
Community and Peer Support:
Learning alongside peers who are navigating similar challenges and recognising that even visibly talented classmates experience their own doubts (helps normalise the universal experience of creative growth).
Counselling and Welfare Support:
Delight’s student welfare services provide access to counselling support for students experiencing confidence struggles, anxiety, or other mental health challenges that may be affecting their studies.
💡 Practical Strategies for Students
- Keep a record of completed work and growth over time- visible evidence counters the distorted self-perception that imposter syndrome creates
- Seek specific, actionable feedback rather than only general praise or criticism
- Recognise that skill development is genuinely non-linear- plateaus and setbacks are normal, not evidence of inadequacy
- Talk openly with tutors and peers about these feelings- they are far more common than most students realise
“Every confident creative professional you admire once felt exactly as uncertain as you may feel now. At Delight, we build skills and confidence together because one without the other is incomplete.”
📍 Delight Technical College | Muindi Mbingu Street, Opposite Jevanjee Gardens, Nairobi | +254 722 533 771 | www.delight.ac.ke



