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6 ways to make your child actually want to study

TOI Lifestyle Desk
| ETimes.in | Last updated on - Oct 7, 2025, 05:30 IST
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1/8

Try these 6 ways to make your child actually want to study

Does homework time feel like a battlefield in your home? You are not alone because from endless negotiation (“Just 10 more minutes!”) to sudden hunger pangs at the sight of textbooks, most parents know how easily study time turns into stress time but here’s the secret most parents miss: motivation can’t be forced, it has to be sparked. What drives children to want to study is not pressure, punishment or even rewards. It is connection, curiosity and a sense of control. Here are six ways to make your child actually want to study without bribing them or shouting.

2/8

Replace pressure with autonomy

Children are more likely to learn when they feel in control of their choices. According to a 2000 landmark study in Contemporary Educational Psychology on Self-Determination Theory, intrinsic motivation flourishes when kids experience autonomy, competence and relatedness. Let your child choose when to study (within limits) or which subject to tackle first. Ask, “Would you rather do math before or after snack time?” Giving them ownership makes studying feel less like a command and more like a choice.

3/8

Turn goals into games

Gamification or turning tasks into game-like challenges has measurable motivational benefits. A 2019 Frontiers in Psychology study found that even small game-like elements (badges, points, progress bars) increase persistence and enjoyment in learning tasks. Create “study quests” for e.g., 20 minutes of one level up. Or have a “beat your own record” challenge for spelling or mental math. When learning feels playful, effort feels natural.

4/8

Praise effort, not intelligence

Psychologist Carol Dweck’s 2007 research at Stanford, published in Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, showed that children praised for effort (“You worked hard on this”) develop a growth mindset, believing intelligence can be improved. On the other hand, kids praised for being “smart” often become afraid of failure and avoid challenges. When your child studies or finishes homework, skip “You’re so smart”. Instead say, “I love how focused you were”. It teaches them to love the process, not just the result.

5/8

Build curiosity before books

A 2022 Harvard study in Learning and Instruction found that curiosity primes the brain for deeper learning by activating the hippocampus, the region involved in memory retention. Simply put, kids remember more when they want to know. Before opening a textbook, ask an intriguing question, “Did you know the moon smells like gunpowder?” or “Why does your stomach growl when you are hungry?” Curiosity makes studying feel like discovery, not duty.

6/8

Create a “study ritual,” not a rule

Children thrive on predictability. A 2020 Journal of Family Psychology study found that small but consistent routines like designated homework time and space reduce resistance and improve focus. Make study time a calm ritual with the same table, soft light and maybe their favourite drink. A five-minute wind-down before study signals to their brain that it is time to switch on focus mode.

7/8

Celebrate progress, not perfection

According to a 2023 Educational Psychology Review meta-analysis, students who track and celebrate progress, even small milestones, report higher motivation and lower stress. Create a visual progress board of stars, stickers or colour bars where your child can mark completed chapters or tasks. Progress visibility fuels intrinsic satisfaction and a sense of achievement.

8/8

Motivation isn’t magic, it’s psychology.

When kids feel respected, capable and curious, studying stops being a chore and becomes a challenge they want to take on. The goal is not to raise a child who studies out of fear of punishment, it is to raise one who studies out of love for learning because once that spark is lit, you will spend a lot less time nagging and a lot more time watching them thrive.

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Copyright © Jun 1, 2026, 04.11AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service