The 2010 annual freshmen survey from UCLA found that incoming freshmen self-report as having lower levels of mental health then previous freshmen over the past 25 years. Lower levels of mental health have been found in research to correlate with higher levels of stress. If students have high levels of stress and ineffective coping skills this may negatively affect their performance. To understand how school stress, coping, and performance interact with each other, college freshmen from a mid sized university in the rocky mountain region were asked to complete a stress inventory, a coping inventory, and a demographic survey. Results showed that stress and coping are significantly positively correlated, specifically emotion coping was significantly correlated with stress. Regression analysis showed that stress accounted for over a quarter of the variance in GPA when controlling for gender. These results suggest that stress may change a student’s performance, and that freshmen may only know how to cope with stress in an emotional way.