Executive Function: The First Homework - Building Blocks for Your Child's Learning and Life
Executive Function
Watch this short video to find out more about Executive Function and its important role in child development
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What is Executive Function?
Executive Function (EF) is like the brain's "management system." It helps children plan, focus, remember instructions, and juggle multiple tasks successfully.
Key EF skills include memory, self-control, and flexible thinking.
Why is EF Important?
School Success: EF skills help children organize their schoolwork, follow directions, and start tasks on time.
Everyday Life: These skills are important for managing time, controlling emotions, and adapting to new situations.
Where Does EF Take Place in the Brain?
Prefrontal Cortex: The main area responsible for EF is the prefrontal cortex, located at the front of the brain. This area helps with planning, decision-making, and controlling behaviour
Other Areas: The anterior cingulate cortex, basal ganglia, cerebellum, and parietal cortex also play roles in supporting EF
What Schools Are Noticing:
Schools see that children develop these skills at different rates.
Children are taking longer to develop executive functioning skills than before.
Children in supportive and stimulating home and school environments tend to develop EF skills faster, especially in reading and thinking skills.
Why Are We Noticing This?:
Increased financial and time pressures on families reducing time spent together at a young age.
Increased access to screens and devices which don't develop EF skills at the rate of adult to child or child to child interactions and interrupts sleep which helps effective EF.
Limited access to parent and baby/toddler classes since 2020 and the Covid pandemic
Decrease in amount of time children spend outdoors and at play which has significantly reduced since the 1980's and again since the turn of the century with the development of digital technologies.
By understanding and supporting EF development, parents can help their children succeed both in school and in life.
Resources and guides for parents from Harvard University: Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University (2014). Enhancing and Practicing Executive Function Skills with Children from Infancy to Adolescence. Retrieved from www.developingchild.harvard.edu.