How Kids with ADHD Can Actually Remember What They Study
The ADHD brain isn’t bad at memory β it just needs the right tricks. Here are the ones that actually work for study and test prep.
π In this article
Here’s something that surprises a lot of parents: ADHD is not a memory disorder. Kids with ADHD can have remarkable memories for things that excite them β song lyrics, sports stats, story plots, game strategies. The challenge is that their brains struggle to encode and retrieve information that doesn’t come with built-in novelty or emotional charge.
The good news? You can add that charge artificially. With the right memory strategies, children with ADHD can learn to study smarter, retain more, and walk into tests feeling actually prepared β not just tired from staring at notes.
This article covers the six most effective memory techniques for ADHD kids, with real examples your child can use starting tonight.
Why the ADHD Brain Struggles to Hold On to Information
Before we get to the strategies, it helps to understand why remembering is harder for kids with ADHD. The answer lies primarily in working memory β the brain’s mental sticky note that holds information while you’re actively using it.
Working memory: the ADHD brain’s sticky note
Working memory allows a student to follow multi-step directions, hold a question in mind while raising their hand to answer it, and connect new information to what they already know. In reading it aids comprehension; in writing it helps juggle ideas while keeping the big picture in view; in math it tracks numbers and operations across the steps of a problem.
Children with ADHD often have a working memory capacity that is below what would be expected for their age. They also frequently struggle at the encoding stage β the initial moment when information is first learned and stored. If encoding is weak, there is nothing solid to retrieve later during a test, no matter how hard they try.
The strategies below all work by making encoding stronger β giving information more hooks, more colour, more connection to things the brain already cares about.
The 6 Best Memory Tricks for ADHD Kids
The ADHD brain gets overwhelmed fast. Looking at a full chapter of history notes or a long list of spelling words activates the brain’s threat response β which kills motivation and memory before studying even starts.
Chunking is the practice of breaking large amounts of information into small, related groups of 3β5 items. Instead of trying to memorize 20 vocabulary words all at once, your child works with one group of 4 words, masters it, and moves on. The brain finds small clusters far easier to encode, store, and retrieve.
Phone numbers are a perfect real-world example: we don’t remember 6472985531 β we remember 647-298-5531. The information is the same. The grouping is everything.
A mnemonic is any memory device that links new information to something easier to recall β a rhyme, an acronym, a silly sentence, or a story. The ADHD brain thrives on novelty and humour, which makes mnemonics especially powerful for kids with attention difficulties.
The sillier and more ridiculous the mnemonic, the better it tends to work. Research confirms that memory is enhanced by exaggeration, emotion, colour, and absurdity β all things the ADHD brain naturally gravitates toward.
“Dead Monsters Smell Bad” β Long division steps (Divide, Multiply, Subtract, Bring down)
“Every Good Boy Does Fine” β Musical notes E, G, B, D, F
“Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally” β Order of operations (Parentheses, Exponents, Multiply, Divide, Add, Subtract)
Many children with ADHD have strong visuospatial memory β they remember things they can picture far better than things they simply read or hear. Visualization strategies capitalize on this by turning abstract information into vivid mental images.
One powerful version of this is the Memory Palace (also called the Method of Loci). Your child imagines walking through a very familiar place β their bedroom, the route to school β and “places” pieces of information at specific locations along the way. When they need to recall the information, they mentally walk the route and “see” the facts waiting for them.
One of the most powerful β and most underused β memory strategies for ADHD kids is simply explaining what you’ve just learned out loud. Researchers call this the “protΓ©gΓ© effect”: when we try to teach something, our brains automatically reorganize the information more deeply than passive re-reading ever achieves.
For kids with ADHD, this technique has an extra bonus: it requires active engagement. There is no way to zone out while you’re talking. The act of speaking out loud, gesturing, and coming up with your own words creates multiple memory pathways at once β auditory, verbal, and kinesthetic.
Cramming the night before a test is one of the worst strategies for any learner β and for ADHD brains, it’s especially ineffective. The brain consolidates memories during sleep and over time, not during marathon study sessions.
Spaced repetition means reviewing information at increasing intervals: study something today, revisit it tomorrow, then again in three days, then a week later. Each review reinforces the memory trace before it fades, steadily moving information from short-term to long-term storage.
Research shows spaced repetition significantly improves long-term retention in ADHD learners β and it dramatically reduces the amount of time needed to feel prepared for a test.
Children with ADHD learn with their entire body. Research consistently shows that movement during or between study sessions improves focus, consolidates memory, and reduces the restlessness that makes sitting still to study so difficult.
This goes beyond simply taking a movement break β though that helps too. It means actively using the body as part of the memorization process: pacing while reciting facts, creating a hand gesture for each step of a process, bouncing a ball while reviewing flashcards, or even creating a short dance for a sequence of information.
Test Day: How to Actually Retrieve What You Studied
Knowing the material going in and successfully retrieving it under test pressure are two different challenges β and for kids with ADHD, test anxiety and time pressure can temporarily knock memories offline. Here are four strategies for the test itself.
“The more connections we make between the material we’re trying to remember, the easier it will be to recall it when we need it during a test. One of the strongest connections we can use is to make the information more meaningful in some way β through humour, imagery, or personal story.”
β Attention Deficit Disorder Association (ADDA)π Memory tricks at a glance
When Your Child Needs a Little Extra Help
These techniques work β but they take practice to become habits, and many kids with ADHD benefit enormously from having a skilled, patient guide help them apply these strategies consistently across different subjects and grade levels.
At ADHD Tutoring for Kids, our tutors don’t just help with tonight’s homework. We teach children the how of learning β how to encode information, how to organize it, how to retrieve it when it matters most. We build the study skills that keep paying off long after the tutor session ends.
If your child consistently forgets what they’ve studied, freezes on tests, or feels like studying is pointless because “nothing sticks,” a structured ADHD tutoring program can genuinely change that experience.
