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Executive function is how your child’s brain helps them focus, remember important things, manage impulses, and complete tasks to reach their goals. It includes skills like:
Your child starts building these skills as a baby and they keep developing until your child becomes a young adult.
Executive function is often compared to the air traffic control system at a busy airport. This system manages all the planes that take off and land every day. Like the air traffic control system, your child’s brain takes in lots of information. One of the things their brain must do is to remember and prioritize the information, then act on the information their brain has prioritized as most important.
There are 3 main areas of executive function:
Executive function includes many skills your child will need to be successful in life. They aren't born with these skills, but they have the potential to learn them as they grow.
Executive function skills start developing after birth. Back-and-forth interactions with adults, also known as “serve and return,” are important for your child’s growing brain. These face-to-face interactions include talking to your baby and imitating their sounds, facial expressions, and actions. Executive function skills grow quickly in toddlers and preschoolers. Your child will learn to follow simple directions, take turns, and wait. When your child reaches school age, their executive function skills get stronger. They can focus longer, make decisions, plan, and problem solve. They develop social skills, like:
In junior high and high school, your child’s executive function skills help them plan and organize activities, complete and hand in their schoolwork on time, and ask questions and get help when needed. They reflect on the past to make decisions for the future. These skills help them focus on multiple things, prioritize tasks, and check their progress. Executive functioning skills continue to develop through young adulthood until 25 years of age.
Every child is different. Your child may not develop executive function skills at the same speed as other children. It’s normal for children to struggle and need adult help as their skills develop.
There are ways you can help your child build their executive function skills.
There isn’t a diagnosis for children who struggle with executive function. It’s often seen in children with conditions like ADHD, autism, anxiety, and depression. Children with these diagnoses struggle with executive function tasks more than other children. When your child isn’t able to meet demands at home and school, it can lead to bad feelings about themselves. They may appear not to try or care because they feel they can’t get it right.
If your child has executive functioning challenges, they need patience, encouragement, and extra time and help as they develop these skills. You can help by using strategies consistently. They may also need to work with health professionals like an occupational therapist, speech therapist, psychologist, or pediatrician to find the right strategies and support.
For more information about how pediatric rehabilitation services can help, contact:
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