Without a doubt, learning is not just an equation intelligence plus effort. Research across education, neuroscience, and cognitive science shows that how students learn is not only influenced by memory systems, but also by emotion, environment, and instructional design. When families understand what actually helps the brain retain and apply information, school becomes easier and far less stressful.

1. Students Learn More When Practice Is Spaced and Retrieved

Cramming feels productive, but research shows it is one of the least effective ways to learn. Students retain information far better when learning is spaced over time and when they are required to actively recall information rather than re-read it (Catarino, 2025).

Children who practice recalling information  for example, by answering questions, explaining material out loud, or taking low-stakes quizzes  outperform peers who simply reread notes or textbooks (Evidence-Based Learning Methods: Comprehensive Analysis, 2025).

Translation for families:
Short, repeated study sessions over several days works better than long night-before reviews.

2. Active Learning Beats Passive Learning

Highlighting, rereading, and watching videos feel helpful, but research shows these are poor learning strategies when used alone. Learning improves when students must engage with information  by summarizing, retrieving, applying, or teaching it  because these processes strengthen understanding (Reuell, 2019).

Despite difficult feelings, this challenge is not a problem. Researchers call it “desirable difficulty”: when learning feels effortful, memory grows stronger (Puutio, 2025).

Translation for families:
If learning feels a little hard, it’s probably working.

3. Stress Reduces Learning at a Biological Level

Stress is not just emotional, it is neurological.

In fact, high stress disrupts memory formation, attention, and reasoning. While eustress can provide opportunities to build resilience, chronic stress literally reduces activity in brain regions associated with learning and increases activity in fear-based systems (LeWine, 2024). Consequently, students under continual, high pressure may work harder but learn less.

In contrast, positive emotional conditions strengthen engagement and memory (Alexander et al., 2021).

Translation for families:
A calm child learns faster than a pressured one.

4. Sleep and Movement Are Learning Tools, Not Extras

Firstly, it is important to understand that memory consolidation happens during sleep. Additionally, without enough sleep, new information is less likely to be stored properly (Pacheco & Rehman, 2024). Physical movement also increases blood flow and neurochemical activity tied to focus and emotion regulation. In summary, high levels of physical activity and solid sleep hygiene can compound academic efforts, improve mental health, and increase achievement across the board.

Translation for families:
Homework is not more important than sleep or movement.

5. Learning Works Best When Knowledge Has Meaning

Education research shows that information sticks when it connects to something familiar, useful, or personal. Students retain more when learning is contextualized, discussed, and revisited rather than memorized in isolation (RevisionDojo, 2025).

Active-learning classrooms  in which students work with material rather than simply listen  consistently outperform lecture-only environments (Henderson, 2024).

What This Means for Parents and Tutoring

Indeed, the research is clear in recommending that effective learning strategies must adopt a “design first, work second” philosophy to truly produce results.

In summary, students succeed when:

  • practice is spaced
  • recall is required
  • emotion is supported
  • learning is meaningful
  • instruction is flexible

Private tutoring works because it allows instruction to adapt to the learner  not the other way around.

References 

Alexander, R., Aragón, O. R., Bookwala, J., Cherbuin, N., Gatt, J. M., Kahrilas, I. J., Kästner, N., Lawrence, A., Lowe, L., Morrison, R. G., Mueller, S. C., Nusslock, R., Papadelis, C., Polnaszek, K. L., Helene Richter, S., Silton, R. L., & Styliadis, C. (2021). The neuroscience of positive emotions and affect: Implications for cultivating happiness and wellbeing. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 121(121), 220–249. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neubiorev.2020.12.002

Catarino, N. J. (2025, March 12). How Active Recall and Spaced Repetition can help with knowledge retention. Medium. https://medium.com/@juozapavicius.nancy/how-active-recall-and-spaced-repetition-can-help-with-knowledge-retention-34d8abad8811

Evidence-Based Learning Methods: Comprehensive Analysis. (2025, July 13). Jenny Kraft. https://jennykraft.de/deep-research/learning-methods/

Henderson, M. (2024). Active Learning Benefits: How Hands-On Activities Improve Understanding. Tutorlyft.com. https://www.tutorlyft.com/blogs/active-learning-benefits

LeWine, H. E. (2024, April 3). Understanding the stress response. Harvard Health; Harvard Health Publishing. https://www.health.harvard.edu/staying-healthy/understanding-the-stress-response

Pacheco, D., & Rehman, A. (2024, May 9). How Memory and Sleep Are Connected. Sleep Foundation. https://www.sleepfoundation.org/how-sleep-works/memory-and-sleep

Puutio, A. (2025). Why Struggling (the Right Way) Helps You Learn. Psychology Today. https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/curiosity-code/202504/why-struggling-the-right-way-helps-you-learn

Reuell, P. (2019, September 4). Lessons in Learning. Harvard Gazette; Harvard University. https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2019/09/study-shows-that-students-learn-more-when-taking-part-in-classrooms-that-employ-active-learning-strategies/

RevisionDojo. (2025, October 10). Using Conceptual Learning to Build Long-Term Retention. RevisionDojo. https://www.revisiondojo.com/blog/using-conceptual-learning-to-build-long-term-retention


About the Author James N. Munce is a third-year PhD candidate in Global Education with over 10 years of teaching experience. He specializes in History and Self-directed Education

Editor: Jacob Van Loon, B.Sc. Biomedical Sciences