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By Ian Connors, Director of Education

Amanda Lawes

The Memory Palace

Helping Children Remember Tricky Spellings through Imagination

The memory palace, or Method of Loci, is a fascinating memorisation technique that taps into the brain’s natural ability to recall locations and vivid imagery. Even Sherlock Holmes uses a mind palace to solve complex cases in modern adaptations — and the idea can work wonders in the classroom too.

How to Unlock Your Memory's Potential Using Sherlock Holmes's Mind Palace | by Giorgos Pantsios | Mind Cafe | Medium

For KS2 teachers, this method can be adapted to help children remember tricky spellings and make learning both visual and fun.


How the Memory Palace Works

Here’s a simple way to explain it to children:


Example: Spelling the Word Category

Let’s break down category into smaller chunks — cat, e, gor, y.

When the child needs to spell category, they simply walk through their memory palace — cat, e, gorilla, y — reconstructing the word with ease.


The Science Behind It

The memory palace works because the brain is wired to remember spatial and visual information more effectively than abstract concepts.
By associating each part of a word with vivid, visual images in familiar spaces, children create multiple memory pathways.

This method activates the hippocampus, the part of the brain responsible for memory and spatial navigation — making recall faster, stronger, and more durable.


Learning to Learn

When we teach spelling, we’re really teaching something bigger: how to remember.
Techniques like the memory palace give children the tools to learn anything — not just this week’s spelling list.


💜 Try It in Your Classroom

We built Superhero Spelling using the latest research on neuroscience and memory.
Every half term, we introduce a way of learning that helps every child — not just with the weekly words, but with all learning.

Little techniques that build a lifelong toolkit for remembering, understanding, and succeeding.

Check it out 👉 www.superherospelling.com