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Executive function supports students to control their thoughts, feelings, and behaviours, so it is vital for the cognitive control students need for learning, as well as for social skills and emotional regulation. Students use executive function skills when they need to concentrate, plan, coordinate, make choices, solve problems or achieve tasks and goals[1]. Specifically executive function skills comprise:
These skills are crucial to most learning activities in school, enabling students to prioritise and sequence different behaviours to attain a goal. Executive function enables students to inhibit dominant or familiar behavioural responses (so that, for example, they raise their hand to speak rather than blurt out an answer), remember and keep in mind information relevant to the attainment of a task (such as a list of information for solving a maths problem), avoid distractions (listening to the teacher rather than looking out of the window), switch between tasks (such as scanning a text for information and then recording it)[6], and to keep track of what they are doing as they are working. Executive function is also needed for the ability to wait for a turn, cooperate well with others, and deal with difficult emotions such as anxiety, frustration, or anger without hitting out[7].
Executive function skills are essential for learning to read and perform basic mathematics. For example, when reading, children use selective attention to focus on the meaning of the text, and inhibition to suppress the influence of interfering information, such as the alternative meanings a particular word may have in other contexts. They use working memory to remember previously read text and to anticipate upcoming text. Finally, cognitive flexibility enables children to make the mental shifts required when they encounter different word tenses or shift between known and unknown words[8].
Research has found executive function skills to be more predictive of academic achievement than IQ[9], and to be related to higher achievement in areas such as reading, maths and spelling[10] [11] [12]. Similarly, difficulties in executive function are found to be predictive of learning difficulties[13]. One study shows that children with high levels of executive function make faster progress and can catch up with peers even if they are initially behind[14], and other research suggests that higher levels of executive function protect students from the risk of academic failure associated with a poorer socioeconomic context[15].
However, it is important to note that, while executive function is correlated with higher achievement, there is no research that demonstrates a causal relation. Other characteristics of students, such as high socioeconomic status or high levels of parental education, while linked to higher executive function skill, could be the reason for higher achievement[16].
Executive function skills depend on the maturation of particular brain regions but also on stimulation received from the child’s social interactions at home and at school[17]. Research shows that it is possible to improve executive function skills through practice and training, although it is not clear from the research that this improvement translates to an improvement in academic and social skills[18]. It is likely, however, that students with strong executive function skills will be able to make better decisions more often, and to function effectively in a range of situations, with positive consequences for learning and wellbeing throughout life[19].
Games that offer students options and enable them to plan strategies support the development of attention, working memory and cognitive flexibility[20]. These kinds of games offer opportunities to practise holding complicated rules in mind, planning moves in advance (sometimes over many turns), and then adjusting these depending on the imagined or actual moves of opponents.
Physical activities, games and sports encourage children to pay careful attention, monitor their own actions, and plan flexible responses dependent on the varied state of play. They offer lots of potential for practising executive function skills.
Learning to play musical instruments, and participating in music classes or community events, also supports the development of selective attention and monitoring.
Finally,any kind of puzzle is helpful for executive function development as puzzles require students to hold and manipulate information in their working memory.
Endnotes
[1] Jacob, R., & Parkinson, J. (2015). The potential for school-based interventions that target executive function to improve academic achievement: A review. Review of Educational Research, 85 (4), 512-552
[4] Centre on the Developing Child at Harvard University (2014). Enhancing and Practicing Executive Function Skills with Children from Infancy to Adolescence. www.developingchild.harvard.edu.
[6] Jacob & Parkinson (2015)
[7] ENGAGE. (2020). Whānau book.
[8] Daucourt, M. C., Schatschneider, C., Connor, C. M., Al Otaiba, S., & Hart, S. A. (2018). Inhibition, updating working memory, and shifting predict reading disability symptoms in a hybrid model: Project KIDS. Frontiers in Psychology, 9 (238). https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.00238 [open access]
[9] Kassai, R., Futo, J., Demetrovics, Z., & Takacs, Z. K. (2019). A meta-analysis of the experimental evidence on the near- and far-transfer effects among children’s executive function skills. Psychological Bulletin, 145 (2), 165-188. http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/bul0000180
[10] Huizinga, M., Baeyens, D., & Burack, J. A. (2018). Editorial: Executive function and education. Frontiers in Psychology, 9 (1357). https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2018.01357 [open access]
[11] Ribner, A. D., Willoughby, M. T,, Blair, C. B. & the Family Life Project Key Investigators. (2017). Executive function buffers the association between early math and later academic skills. Frontiers in Psychology, 8 (869). https:doi.org/ 10.3389/fpsyg.2017.00869
[12] Jacob & Parkinson (2015).
[13] Daucault, et al. (2018)
[14] Ribner, et al. (2017)
[15] Zelazo, P. D., Blair, C. B., & Willoughby, M. T. (2016). Executive function: Implications for education. National Center for Education Research. https://ies.ed.gov/ncer/pubs/20172000/pdf/20172000.pdf
[16] Jacob & Parkinson (2015)
[17] Huizinga et al. (2018)
[18] Kassai et al. (2019)
[19] ENGAGE (2020).
[20] Centre on the Developing Child at Harvard University (2014).
[21] Centre on the Developing Child at Harvard University (2014).
[22] All activities taken from ENGAGE (2020) School cards and the Centre on the Developing Child at Harvard University (2014).
By Dr Vicki Hargraves