Get the Workbook Answer Key!
And bridging questions to help you relate the activities to real life.

Answer Key
While we know you’re super smart, it never hurts to check your answers! Everyone has different cognitive strengths, so some exercises might have been easy for you and some might have been more tricky.
Checking your answers lets you know what cognitive skills you might want to work on further!
Feel free to check the answer key as you go, or when you finish the workbook.

Bridging Questions
Bridging questions can help us transfer the skills used to complete the exercises, to skills used in real life. Ask yourself these questions throughout or after utilizing the workbook can help you understand what skills you’re working on, and how to better utilize these skills in daily life.
Memory Bridging Questions
- In the game I Remember You!, you practice recalling names and faces. Facial recognition is important for remembering who our family, friends, neighbors, coworkers, and classmates are. How do you feel about this skill in your daily life? Do you ever have trouble recalling the names of acquaintances?
- I Remember You! utilizes working memory, which allows you to hold information in your brain for a few seconds – just long enough to do something with it! How can this type of memory be useful when cooking, grocery shopping, or writing down a phone number?
- Working memory is utilized in Restaurant as well. Does it make it more or less difficult to not have a face to associate the person’s name with?
- In Seize the Keyword, you have to recall the order of verbs in a short story. Do you find it more difficult to memorize verbal information compared to visual information (such as what a person looks like)?
- In what situations in your daily life do you need to remember information in a specific order? How could this skill be useful when driving or cooking?
Attention Bridging Questions
- In everyday life, we have to not get distracted and navigate our space as we move from one place to another – like the skills used in Hurray For Change. When you are in a crowded place such as a restaurant or party, what strategies do you use to navigate a space to ensure that you do not bump into another person? Where else could you apply these strategies?
- In Hurray For Change, you switch between two different tasks. How might you use working memory to help you keep track of two tasks at once? How does this skill come into play during work, or while cooking?
- In Displaced Characters, you’re asked to differentiate between symbols that are probably unfamiliar to you. How can this skill help you find your way in a foreign country?
- In What Doesn’t Belong, you need to figure out which words don’t fit with the others. How can this skill help you when editing something you’ve written?
Language Bridging Questions
- In Decipher, you need to use context clues and trial and error to find the solution. How can these skills help you when you’re trying to catch up on a conversation that you just joined? How might they help you figure out the meaning of an unfamiliar word?
- Ancient Writing might not seem like it’s relevant to language at first – but it is! Recognizing the differences between shapes and symbols can help us when reading. How might this exercise help you strengthen your ability to scan a text and read quickly?
- In Root It Out, you need to pull words from your long term memory. How can this ability help you during conversations in your daily life?
- Secret Files asks you to use categorization and sorting skills to fit the words into different categories. How might this skill help you when cleaning your house? How might it help you when you’re planning a party?
- Exercises like Splitwords and Embroidery require you to recall words from your vocabulary, stored in your long term memory. How can the strategies used in these exercises help you when you are trying to think of a word that’s on the tip of your tongue?
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