Skill
Holds Information in Mind
Child keeps a small amount of information active in memory and uses it to guide a short sequence of actions.
Ages 30–54 months
Why it matters
Working memory is the executive-function capacity to hold and manipulate information over short spans. It lets a child remember a two- or three-step direction, recall where an object was hidden, and keep a goal in mind while acting, all of which support planning and early academic skills.
Builds toward this milestone
- holds information in mind and manipulates it to perform tasks. — Head Start ELOF
What mastery looks like
- Carries out a two-step direction from memory without reminders.
- Recalls which of several covered items was hidden or removed.
- Keeps a stated goal in mind while completing the steps to reach it.
How to observe it
- After a two-step request, does the child complete both parts in order?
- In a hiding or memory game, does the child remember the location after a short delay?
Accessibility
- Pair spoken information with a picture, gesture, or object cue as a memory anchor.
- Shorten the number of items to remember before gradually increasing the load.
Activities
Learn first
Evidence
- Head Start Early Learning Outcomes Framework (ELOF) — U.S. Office of Head Start · 2015 · U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
Early Atlas