Five years post-pandemic, schools have revised curriculum, scaled tutoring programs, and layered in more interventions than ever before. And yet, far too many students are still struggling to focus, retain information, and catch up. The effects of the pandemic were seen in students almost immediately, as performance in reading and math dipped far below pre-pandemic levels, and has yet to recover.
The hard truth? It's not just about what we’re teaching. Another factor is whether students are cognitively ready to learn.
Despite the best efforts of educators, most academic recovery efforts are overlooking a critical factor: cognitive readiness—the brain’s ability to process, focus, remember, and apply information. Without it, even the most strategic instruction falls short.
Cognitive readiness refers to a student’s mental preparedness to engage in and benefit from learning. It includes:
It’s the mental infrastructure that supports all academic learning.
For many students—especially those with ADHD, IEPs, or learning differences—this infrastructure was underdeveloped before the pandemic. COVID only made it worse.
When students walk into a classroom, they aren’t just bringing notebooks and Chromebooks. They bring a set of mental tools that determine how well they can engage with instruction:
Collectively, these skills form the foundation of executive function—the brain’s control system for learning. When these systems are underdeveloped or disrupted (as they were for many students during the pandemic), the result isn’t just slower learning. It’s widespread academic inefficiency.
In fact, research has shown that executive function skills are often a stronger predictor of academic success than IQ, particularly in math and reading fluency (Best et al., 2011; Diamond & Lee, 2011).
Put simply: if students can’t focus, process instructions, or retain material, they can’t progress academically, no matter how strong the curriculum is or how hard teachers try to educate.
Since 2020, billions have been spent on learning recovery: high-dosage tutoring, extended learning time, and new literacy programs. But few of these initiatives directly address how the brain learns.
The result? Limited gains and deepening gaps.
Learning gaps are still widening. Attention challenges are spiking. Educator burnout is rising. The urgency is real—and districts are still searching for answers.
By building cognitive readiness, schools don’t just boost student outcomes. They:
Technology-based cognitive training could be the key to getting academic results back on track. By improving executive function, attention, and working memory, students can be better prepared to learn, retain information, and apply their knowledge. Through neuroplasticity—the brain’s ability to rewire and strengthen connections—students begin to learn faster, retain more, and engage more deeply.
Mastermind Cognitive Training offers a robust brain training program delivered through Virtual Reality and Tablet formats. The training deploys fun, gamified exercises that focus on the development of enhanced brain and learning performance. They look like video games, but are absolutely not. The program consists of neuroscience-based training protocols targeting critical brain functions and efficiency. The training requires no additional staffing, auto-adapts to each student's skill levels, and integrates into curriculum blocks, educational enrichment, or after-school programming.
Unlike tutoring, which reteaches content, cognitive training strengthens the systems that make learning possible. And unlike many educational apps, the science is robust:
If we want students to read with fluency, compute with accuracy, and think with confidence, we must first ensure their brains are ready.
Cognitive readiness isn’t a nice-to-have. It’s the missing link in our learning recovery strategy.
It’s time to treat cognitive training as foundational—not supplemental.
Schools and education organizations can launch a free demo of Mastermind Cognitive Training with:
Visit www.mastermindtraining.com to schedule a demo, download program materials, or explore our free trial options.
Let’s rebuild learning from the brain up.