When your child pulls information out of memory, by explaining a story, teaching you what they learned, or solving a problem without notes, their brain actually wires that knowledge in more strongly.
This is called the retrieval practice effect, one of the most powerful tools in cognitive science.
Studies show:
✅ Active recall strengthens neural pathways, making memory retrieval easier.
✅ It highlights knowledge gaps, so learning is more focused.
✅ Kids retain more over time, especially when recall feels playful (quizzing, games, storytelling).
Simple ways to try this at home:
- Story Time Recall
After reading, ask them to retell the story in their own words. - Teach-Back Technique
Let them “teach” a toy or sibling what they’ve just learned. - Flashcards
Use Q&A prompts for self-testing.
Memory isn’t built by input alone, it grows stronger with output. Each time your child recalls, their brain is learning how to learn.