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Strategies for Working With Children with Executive Functioning Difficulties. Melissa Matovic, Psy.D. Melissa Rosenblatt, Ph.D., BCBA-D. What is Executive Functioning?.
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Strategies for Working With Children with Executive Functioning Difficulties Melissa Matovic, Psy.D. Melissa Rosenblatt, Ph.D., BCBA-D
What is Executive Functioning? • Aset of mental skills that are coordinated in the brain's frontal lobe. Executive functions work together to help a person achieve goals. • We use executive functioning when we plan, organize, strategize, pay attention, and remember details.
Development of Executive Functioning Skills • Executive functioning is slow to fully develop. • It emerges in late infancy, goes through marked changes during the ages of 2 through 6, and does not peak until around age 25. • Therefore, it is important for children to be provided with strategies and adult support in order to help them acquire these skills.
Executive Functioning Difficulties • Planning • Organizing Materials and Space • Time Management • Working Memory • Initiating Tasks • Difficulties can be seen at any age but tend to be increasingly apparent during the elementary grades as the demands of school work increase.
How Can Executive Functioning Affect Learning? • Trouble initiating and completing tasks in a timely manner. • Difficulty generating ideas independently. • Difficulty retaining information that is required to complete a task. • Difficulty in communicating details in an organized, sequential manner (i.e., orally and/or in writing). • Struggles to understand the planning that is needed to complete a project.
Executive Function:Inhibition • Ability to stop one’s own behavior at the appropriate time, including stopping actions and thoughts (i.e., impulse control). • Examples: A child interrupting their parents when they are on the telephone, grabbing someone else’s toy.
Strategies for Inhibition • The use of visual cues can be highly effective for this deficit area. • Some examples may include: stop sign, hand signals, pictures of ‘quiet mouth,’ traffic light • Use of a fidget toy or object. • Some examples include: Tangle, velcro, squishy ball, fun-tac/ therapy putty • When a child begins to interrupt, ask them to write down their comments/questions. In order for this strategy to be effective, make sure you give the child time to talk about what they have written.
Executive Function:Shifting • Ability to move freely from one situation to another and to think flexibly in order to respond appropriately to the situation. • Example: Your child does not want to stop playing their video games and begin their homework.
Strategies for Shifting • Provide warnings as to when the transition will occur (i.e., “In 5 minutes, I need you to clean up your toys and begin your homework.”) • The use of visual timers. This strategy provides a non-verbal warning and helps children understand the concept of time. • Schedules can be used to prepare your child for the series of activities they need to complete while at home. • Based on your child’s developmental level and ability, a visual schedule (i.e., with pictures) may be useful.
Executive Function: Initiation • Ability to begin a task or activity and to independently generate ideas, responses, or problem solving strategies. • Example: You tell your child to begin their homework and when you check-in 5 minutes later, no work has been completed.
Strategies for Initiation • Provide adult assistance with the first item to ensure the child understands the task demands. • For writing tasks, the use of graphic organizers may be helpful in formulating their ideas. • Initially, have a brief discussion with your child in order to brainstorm ideas/responses before your child begins working independently. • Provide incentives when asking your child to engage in non-preferred activities (i.e., chores and homework).
Executive Function:Working Memory • Capacity to hold information in your mind for the purpose of completing a task. • Example: When you ask your child to complete multi-step directions (e.g., brush your teeth, get dressed, and come downstairs for breakfast).
Strategies for Working Memory • Repeat orally presented information. • Simplify the language in directions. • Chunk/break down multi-step directions. • Use of mnemonics or other strategies to help remember a series or other information. • Use visualization strategies to enhance recall.
Executive Function: Planning/Organization • Ability to manage current and future-oriented task demands. Also includes the ability to impose order on work, play, and storage spaces. • Example: You are bringing your child to football practice and ask them to gather all of their necessary materials before it is time to leave.
Strategies for Planning/Organization • The use of checklists is highly effective in increasing organizational skills. • The use of a calendar for upcoming activities and/or assignments. • Color coding books/folders by subject area. • Breakdown long-term assignments into smaller components and set deadlines accordingly. • Designate a quiet and clean space for your child to complete their homework or other tasks.
Executive Function:Self-Monitoring • Ability to monitor one’s own performance and to measure it against some standard of what is needed or expected. • Example: You ask your child to complete their math assignment and then check it for accuracy.
Strategies for Self-Monitoring • Use of a calculator can be used to ensure accuracy of math assignments. • The use of a checklist to explicitly denote all steps necessary to complete the task. • Creating checkpoints to ensure comprehension of presented material (e.g., when you get to #5, check-in with me). • The use of visuals (e.g., red/green to indicate whether your child fully understands or needs assistance).
Resources • National Center for Learning Disabilities (NCLD) • http://www.ldonline.org/article/29122/ • Late, Lost, and Unprepared: A Parents’ Guide to Helping Children with Executive Functioning • By Joyce Cooper-Kahn & Laurie Dietzel • Children and Adults with Attention- Deficit/ Hyperactivity Disorder (CHADD) • http://www.chadd.org/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=nuIeM7StKko%3D