🧠 Short-Term Memory & Focus Training
Course overview
Lesson Overview

9.14 – Practicing Sequential Thinking in Chores: Sequential thinking is the mental process of seeing steps in order before doing them, and household chores are perfect for strengthening this skill. Whether washing dishes, doing laundry, or cleaning a room, each task has a natural rhythm your brain can practice remembering. Planning chores by sequence—gather, clean, dry, organize—teaches your mind how to group actions logically. This strengthens working memory, attention control, and planning ability. As you repeat these sequences, they become automatic patterns that reduce effort and improve accuracy. Over time, sequential practice enhances your ability to handle larger projects that require multiple steps. It also increases patience, because your focus stays on process rather than rushing to the end. Repetition turns routine tasks into memory training sessions without needing extra time. Each completed chore reinforces discipline, order, and mental clarity—skills that translate directly into more confident, structured daily living.

About this course

Learn how to improve focus, memory, and mental organization with simple, repeatable strategies that support daily routines and task completion. This section helps you build the thinking skills needed for greater independence at home and in the community.

This course includes:
  • Structured feedback and documentation review by a supervising licensed clinician
  • Clinical oversight compliant with Medicaid Provider Type 14 standards for rehabilitative services
  • Lessons designed for asynchronous delivery via telehealth or in-person instruction

Our platform is HIPAA, Medicaid, Medicare, and GDPR-compliant. We protect your data with secure systems, never sell your information, and only collect what is necessary to support your care and wellness. learn more

Allow