ABCmouse encourages children to revisit and replay activities as often as they like. Repetition is a key part of early learning—replaying familiar games, puzzles, or lessons helps reinforce concepts, build confidence, and promote mastery over time.
However, when it comes to reward tickets, there are limits in place to encourage exploration across the full curriculum.
How Replaying Works
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All activities in ABCmouse can be played an unlimited number of times.
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This includes games, puzzles, books, songs, and lessons across all Learning Levels.
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Children are free to repeat their favorites as often as they wish.
🔁 Tip: Repeating activities can strengthen memory, improve fluency, and reinforce previously learned skills—especially in reading and math.
Ticket Earning Limits
To maintain balance and motivate exploration:
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Children earn tickets for the first five completions of any given activity.
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After the fifth replay, no additional tickets will be awarded for that specific activity.
This helps prevent children from repeating the same activity just for tickets and instead encourages them to try new learning experiences across the program.
What to Tell Your Child
If your child notices they aren’t receiving tickets after redoing an activity, you can explain:
"You’ve already earned all the tickets for this one! Let’s pick something new so you can learn more and earn more tickets."
This explanation often turns a moment of frustration into a learning opportunity—and helps spark curiosity about new parts of the program.
How Parents Can Support Meaningful Replays
Replaying isn’t just repetition—it’s a chance to go deeper. Here are a few ways you can guide your child during a replay:
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Ask guiding questions during or after the activity:
“What did you notice this time that you didn’t notice before?” or “Can you explain what happened in your own words?” -
Encourage mastery moments: Try saying, “Let’s see if you can finish it even faster this time,” or “Can you do it without any hints now?”
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Revisit with a twist: After repeating a story or song, challenge your child to retell or act it out, draw a scene from it, or connect it to something from real life.
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Celebrate improvement: Help your child see their own growth by praising fluency, attention to detail, or increased confidence—even if no tickets are awarded.
These small moments can turn simple repetition into deep, connected learning.