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NeuroNexus Navigator – Lesson 3

MadlySane NeuroNexus Course: Lesson 3: Working Memory Strategies.

Welcome back, Navigator! In Lesson 2, you learned to tune your attention system. Now we’re stepping into your brain’s **mental workspace**—your working memory.

Working memory lets you hold and manipulate short bits of information: following directions, solving problems, and keeping track of a conversation. It’s not just memory—it’s *mental juggling*, and it’s the backbone of your executive functioning.

  • What working memory does—and what it doesn’t.
  • Real-life challenges: overload, forgetting mid-task, mental fatigue.
  • Self-check: Assess your capacity and processing speed.
  • Scaffolding strategies: chunking, visual anchors, external tools.

How Working Memory Works

Your working memory is like a brain chalkboard—it holds 5–9 bits of information at once, but it fades quickly. You rely on it every time you:

  • Follow multi-step instructions without re-checking
  • Do mental calculations (e.g. split a bill, estimate change)
  • Hold your place while thinking through a plan or story
  • Mentally rehearse a response during a conversation

If this chalkboard gets overloaded, we see breakdowns: skipped steps, blank outs, unfinished tasks. Sound familiar? That’s where scaffolding comes in—but first, let’s assess how your working memory is doing.

Working Memory Self-Assessment

1. I can follow multi-step instructions without getting confused.

2. I often lose track of steps while working through a task mentally.

3. I mentally rehearse conversations or responses before I speak.

4. I find it easy to manipulate information in my mind without writing it down.

5. I get mentally fatigued after juggling multiple ideas at once.

Lesson Complete!

You’ve assessed your working memory and explored scaffolding strategies. Remember, your brain’s workspace is flexible—just like a desk, it functions best when organized and supported.

Up Next: Lesson 4 — Executive Function & Task Management

In Lesson 4, we’ll dive into task initiation, planning, inhibition, and flexible thinking. Ready to upgrade your executive system?

Proceed to Lesson 4 →

MadlySane NeuroNexus Course – Lesson 3