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Facilitating Executive Skills Development Edward C Taylor PhD Child and Adolescent Psychologist August 18, 2010

Facilitating Executive Skills Development

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Edward C Taylor PhD Child and Adolescent Psychologist August 18, 2010. Facilitating Executive Skills Development . The Millennial Experience. The Millennial Environment. Socially and Cognitively, Neither Here Nor There High Volume of Data Presented Rapidly Rapid Shifts in Topic or Place - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Facilitating Executive Skills Development Edward C Taylor PhDChild and Adolescent PsychologistAugust 18, 2010

Page 2: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

The Millennial Experience

Page 3: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

The Millennial EnvironmentSocially and Cognitively, Neither

Here Nor ThereHigh Volume of Data Presented

RapidlyRapid Shifts in Topic or PlaceCompressed SpeechEnvironmentally Directed AwarenessDigital and Visual DataMulti-Tasking

Page 4: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Environment Directed AwarenessReacting, Not Planning or ReflectingSomeone else is making decisions

about what, where, how, how long, and how much

Control over the life experience is externalized

Page 5: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

What Can The Teacher D0 ?

Facilitate Development of the Executive Skills in Order to Internalize Control Over the Student’s Life Experience

Page 6: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Executive Skills

Facilitate getting the job doneFacilitate our growth over time as a

consequence of our experiencesAllow us to gain greater control over

our future

Page 7: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Broad Categories of Executive SkillsSelf-ActivationSelf-RegulationSelf-AwarenessSelf-Determination

Page 8: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Self-Activation

Lighting Up

Page 9: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Self-Regulation

InitiatingModulatingGaugingFocus – SelectiveFocus- SustainingStopping-InterruptingShifting Inhibiting

Page 10: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Self-Regulation

OrganizingForeseeingGeneratingAssociatingBalancingStoringRetrievingPacingTiming

Page 11: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Self-Regulation

ExecutingMonitoringCorrecting

Page 12: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Self-Realization

Direct cognitive processes that promote self-awareness, self-reflection, and self-analysis

Cue cognitive processes to use this self-knowledge to initiate, sustain, or alter behavior

Page 13: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Self-Determination

Foresight, Long Term Planning, and Goal Generation

Direct cognitive processes to construct visions of the future and to reflect on the past in order to improve or alter behavior in the future

Page 14: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Executive Skills Facts Effectiveness is Domain Specific

Sensation-Perception Emotion Cognition Action

Effectiveness is Arena of Operation Specific Intrapersonal Interpersonal Environment Symbol System

Page 15: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Executive Skills Facts

Development begins in first years of life and continues through the life span

Development occurs in spurtsNatural maturational delays can

occurThere is intra-individual unevenness

in developmentThere is inter-individual unevennessThere is gender unevenness

Page 16: Facilitating Executive Skills Development
Page 17: Facilitating Executive Skills Development
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Can the environment influence the development of a biologically based

set of skills ?

Page 19: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

The Statue Test 1940 vs 2001

1940

3 year olds 0 minutes

5 year olds 3 minutes

7 year olds long time

2001

3 year olds 0 minutes

5 year olds 0 minutes

7 year olds 3 minutes

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Page 22: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Imaginative Play and the Executive Skills

PLAY IN FIRST HALF OF 20TH CENTURY

Unsupervised Child directed In groups Imaginative Activity focused Improvisation Symbolic toys Kids made the rules At home and at school

PLAY IN SECOND HALF OF 20TH CENTURY

Adult organized and directed

Toy or object focused Real toys with a

specific purpose or theme

Rules are given TV, video games, or

lessons Schools focus on

cognitive skills development to pass the test

Page 23: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

The Play Connection

Imaginative play promotes self-regulatory self-talk

Self- regulatory self-talk promotes Control over emotions Impulse resistance Planning Plan execution Execution monitoring and self-evaluation Task persistence

Page 24: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Can the environment influence the development of a biologically based

set of skills ?

YES

Page 25: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

The Pathway

Facilitate through play and experience

ModelingDirect instructionEnvironmental engineeringProcess awarenessManage the developmental angst

Page 26: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Two Step Intervention ModelAttempt to Generate Internal GrowthApply External Control When

Necessary

Page 27: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Two Step Intervention ModelAttempt to Generate Internal GrowthApply External Control When

Necessary

Page 28: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

     “The greatest sign of success for a teacher... is to be able to say, "The children are now working as if I did not exist.”

Page 29: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

A Corry Story: Watch Your Language

Page 30: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Never help a child with a task at which s/he feels s/he can succeed.

Page 31: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Using Language to Promote Internal Control Internalize, don’t externalize the

dilemma“You are the boss of the soup.”What is your priority ?Not deciding is decidingHow is that working for you ?

Page 32: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Techniques to Promote Internal Control Model and Use Self-Talk Encourage Self-Talk, Aloud Model and Use Self-Administered Rewards Model and Use Self-Regulation Routines Teach Self-Regulation Skills Encourage Self-Regulation Behavior Develop a Common Vocabulary for

Discussing and Signaling Need for EF State the Goals of Learning Activities Provide Feedback About Performance

Page 33: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Two Step Intervention ModelAttempt to Generate Internal GrowthApply External Control When

Necessary

Page 34: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

The Velvet Gloved Dictator

Page 35: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Strategies For Teaching Executive Skills

Classroom routinesClassroom rulesClassroom organizational systemsLearning strategy trainingClassroom process meetingsManaging developmental angstWatch your language

Page 36: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Classroom Routines

Beginning the day routine Hand in homework Discuss and make plan for the day’s work Prepare materials for the day’s work

End of the day routine Homework assignments written in the planner Backpack materials check Instructions review Review plans for next day Prepare space for the next day

Page 37: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Classroom Routines Development

Teach explicitlyModel consistently and overtlyPrepare to spend two monthsUse checklists at first and then fade

themUse buddy check systemPeriodically count frequency of

target behaviors to determine effectiveness

Page 38: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Classroom Rules

Establish boundaries and moresTrain in the same way that routines

are taughtPost them

Page 39: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Pre K and Kindergarten

Teachers are the children’s frontal lobes in many instances

Young children learn and communicate through play

Page 40: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Strategies To Facilitate Executive Skills DevelopmentSimon Says

Thinking Impulse inhibition

Complex Imaginative Play Sustained for 30+ minutes Of the 1940’s style

Page 41: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Strategies To Facilitate Executive Skills DevelopmentActivities requiring planning

Games with directions and goal seeking Construction activities Pattern recognition activities Cooking

Joint Storybook Reading Process the characters self-regulatory

behavior promoted modeling Mastery models not Expert models

Page 42: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Elementary Years

Environmental engineeringSkills building and introduction of

tools

Page 43: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Organizational Systems

Folder systemNotebook systemsA place for everything and

everything in its placeGantt charts for projectsMake consistent across classesTime management aids: clocks,

calendars, timers, and schedules

Page 44: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Middle School

Pre-Copernican Thinkers

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Middle School

Pre-Copernican ThinkersZen Buddhist Naturalists

Page 47: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Learning Strategy Training

Teach explicitlyDiscuss content and process

simultaneouslyPost-mortems on tests, papers, etc.

Page 48: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Weekly Process Meetings

The post-mortemWhat’s working and what’s not Identify reoccurring problemsEncourage student brainstorming Individualize

Page 49: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Instructional Strategies

Offer feedback and opportunities to re-work or re-study, based upon a self-assessment of what did not work

Offer multiple choices for demonstrating knowledge and skills

Offer pop quizzes as a self-assessment tool

Page 50: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

High School and Beyond

Take advantage of the capacity to self-observe and self-evaluate

Page 51: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Facilitating Executive Skills Development In The Older Student

High school is about not having to have your mother go to college with you

Internalizing the dilemmaGiving voice to the resistanceManaging the anxietyThe student as teacher and mentor

Page 52: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Child Constraints

Developmental lagDisorders that involve frontal lobe

functionThe child’s non-school environmentQuestion:

Lacking capacity ?▪ Developmental ?▪ Static ?

Possesses capacity but lacks desire ? Possesses capacity but lacks training ?

Page 53: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

Systemic Constraints

Emphasis on knowledge rather than problem solving

The thirty-nine week yearThe 45 minute hour

Page 54: Facilitating Executive Skills Development

References iBrain, Gary Small, MD and Gigi Virgan The New Brain, Richard Restak, MD The Overflowing Brain, Torkel Klingberg, MD Executive Functioning. George

McCloskey,PhD. Learning and the Brain Conference. Boston, MA, 2007

Executive Skills in Children and Adolescents. Dawson, P. & Guare, R., Guilford Press, New York, 2004

Executive Functioning in Education. Lynn Meltzer, Ed. Guilford Press, New York, 2007