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26: What are Foundational Executive Functioning Skills?
FromScience Backed Solutions for Children’s Behavior and Mental Health
26: What are Foundational Executive Functioning Skills?
FromScience Backed Solutions for Children’s Behavior and Mental Health
ratings:
Length:
12 minutes
Released:
Feb 23, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode
Description
You can’t build a house without a good foundation and the same applies to executive functioning. The same way that a roof can’t go on the house without a good foundation. Many people struggle with accomplishing things and producing work even at the starting point.It is thus important for us to discuss the foundational skills of executive function to know where we should start. It will also definitely help us reach higher level skills like writing and completing high level work.What are the foundational skills for executive functioning?We’ve mentioned that executive functioning is divided into two aspects: foundational skills and advanced executive functioning skills. For now, we’ll be focusing on the foundational skills to have a solid ground and in depth understanding on what executive function is.These skills are response inhibition, working memory, emotional control, good flexibility in your brain, sustained attention, staying on task, being able to stick with it, and starting tasks, or what we call task initiation. But first, we have to clarify that attention is the brain's ability to alert whereas executive functioning is planning or prioritizing for a future event, results or outcome. And so, people with great executive functioning tend to visualize or think about the results when they’re accomplishing tasks. As for people without good executive functioning, they have a hard time focusing and visualizing these outcomes. So the number one foundational skill for executive functioning is response inhibition which means putting the brakes on, being able to shift gears, engaging in a task, and controlling your impulses at the same time.Commonly, kids with ADHD or executive function disorder are easily distracted. When we talk about distractibility, we’re referring to the brain's inability to control impulses. And if we don't control ourselves behaviorally and cognitively, we can't build from it.It’s all about reinforcing and shaping the behaviors you want.They say practice makes perfect and there’s some truth behind it since it’s all about reinforcing and shaping the behaviors you want. And that takes a lot of practice more than you might think. In fact, as I’ve mentioned in one of my previous podcast episodes, it takes 34 times to master something at a neat level. If you have a learning or processing problem, anything that's interfering with your thinking, anxiety, depression, it's going to be three times that amount. We always have to consider the brain in parenting. We need to look at research. We need to make informed decisions. Also, we have to keep in mind that our kids aren't doing this or acting like this on purpose. If you think your kids are doing this on purpose, they're not. It’s important for kids to learn how to self-regulate to support their controlled responses. To emphasize, we have to shape the behaviors we want. We want to show them what to do and then reinforce them. That's how behaviorism works and it’s a great resource for parents. What are the different kinds of memory?When we talk about memory, there are all sorts of memories. We have working memory, visual memory, auditory and kinesthetic. According to the different amounts of memory, we have long term recall and short term recall. So we have a complex field of memories.But what we use a lot is the working memory. It's pretty useful when we need to hold a certain amount of information for a short amount of time. That's our working memory. We have to hold multiple commands all the time. That's why we use working memory too much. We scaffold things to help us remember we do structure, we do routines, we do batching. We write things down. There are so many ways to help support us. Emotional control is more about cognitive...
Released:
Feb 23, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode
Titles in the series (100)
It's Gonna Be Ok! by Science Backed Solutions for Children’s Behavior and Mental Health