Tag Archives: executive function

picture of a boy in a wheelchair completing an art project using the functionalhand to help hold his tools.

Executive Function – Making Strategies Inclusive

Linda Merry, OTR/L, NDT/C

What is Executive Function?

The phrase “executive function” as described in the Harvard Journal, Developing Child, refers to a set of skills.  These skills underlie the capacity to plan ahead and meet goals, display self-control, follow multiple-step directions even when interrupted and stay focused despite distractions, among others.  

No one is born with executive function skills but nearly everyone can learn them.  Adults set up the framework for children to learn and practice these skills over time by establishing routines, breaking big tasks into smaller chunks, and encouraging activities involving rules, directions and planning skills.  

As our child becomes more competent and these areas of the brain develop, it enables them to plan for themselves.  It also allows them to focus and stay engaged with information to complete tasks.  Research has shown by 12 months of age, a child’s experiences are helping to lay the foundation for the ongoing development of executive function skills. 

Get Ready, Do, Done

Sara Ward and Kristen Jacobsen’s  framework, “get ready, do, done”, to support skill development provides a process to develop the executive functioning abilities.   This system is easily incorporated into all activities.  

Implementation

The first step is to help your child or student visualize what the project will look like when it is done i.e., what does the end look like.  Children need the opportunity to visualize the end before they plan their steps. This is especially true for a child who lacks the motor control to move their body or communication skills to verbalize their intent.  A child may have the ability to plan a task but lack the opportunity when others bring materials to them, place them on their surface and physically help with each step.

Next, you want the child to visualize the steps they need to take.  It may involve cutting a circle, drawing a picture, gluing, etc.  You want your child to think through the process. Let the child tell you what steps they want to take before beginning.

Last, to “get ready” the child should tell you what materials they need.  Is it markers, paper, ruler, glue stick, etc.?

Accessibility For The Child With Special Needs.

When a child can visualize what their completed project looks like, they can talk through the process and collect needed materials as independent as possible.  What if a child is unable to communicate verbally or walk over to get what they need?  Here are strategies that provide inclusive opportunities to use this framework.  It allows the child with neuromotor difficulties to participate in opportunities that lay the foundation for executive functioning.  The goal is to support their abilities and not allow their impairments to limit their learning.

Get Ready, Do, Done provides a visual or template to clearly demonstrate the thinking process.

Strategies To Support Inclusive Learning

  • Positioning Needs of the Child: When completing activities that require attention, concentration and upper extremity control, optimal positioning is important.  A child seated upright so they can view what their project looks like when completed.  Positioning  the child at 90:90:90 for the hips:knees:ankles  with feet supported is usually preferred.  
  • Tray Surface: Supporting the upper arm on a table surface provides a base of support for upper extremity control.  By increasing the contact surface of the forearm and hand, it provides stability and increased sensory awareness of movement in space. We have found a tray surface that supports the elbows, by curving around the body, makes a significant difference. The work surface should be large enough to fit materials and support the upper body.  Common errors are elbows falling off the table or not enough room for materials. 
  • Organization of Work Surface:  For the individual with motor coordination, it can be helpful to have a container where materials are placed avoiding knocking them off the tray.  This can be a small bowl or box that serves as a “waiting area” for items such as scissors and glue.
  • Vision Considerations: The size, colors and position of the project are important.  Placing the project that is “done” and showing what the end looks like should be of a size, position and contrast that supports vision needs.  Placing it on an easel, on the wall or at an angle that allows for easy viewing is helpful and allows the child to visually reference the project that they are completing.  Adjusting the size by enlarging pictures or having a black contrasting background may help the individual with vision impairments.
  • Activity Selection/Material Considerations:  Using templates and/or pre-made cut outs may help the individual with motor impairments.  If the end is a picture of a farm, using a template that supports coloring inside can be helpful.  Using stickers that allow the individual to place or glue them reduces the motor demands.  Forming Wikki Stix into shapes that allow the child to color inside simple shapes is another option.
  • Tool Use: Using adaptive crayons or adapted markers, glue sticks and other materials may allow the child to do the task without hand over hand assistance.  You want to reduce the motor demands when you increase the cognitive requirements.  There are many options to help children hold their own tools.  The Functionalhand allows children to hold objects in either the  horizontal or vertical orientation.  Any size crayon, marker, glue stick, dry erase markers or school tools can fit into the flexible cord system.  For children who are unable to sustain a grasp on the Functionalhand independently, the Eazyhold strap is the ideal complimentary product.  
 Finished project displayed on a slant board as a visual reference for "Done"
Finished project displayed on a slant board as a visual reference for “Done”
Alistair references done while he uses the Functionalhand to paint his cow.  
Alistair references done while he uses the Functionalhand to paint his cow.  

Do 

Keeping the activity initially simple and building on the concept once the child is familiar is important. Initial activities may be to color pictures and glue them in position.   Having two sets of icons, one showing the action and the other showing the tool helps them to understand the difference.

Visual of a girl cutting- an example of an inclusive executive function strategy
Use a picture of the action for “Do”
Scissor Visual- - an example of an inclusive executive function strategy
Use a picture of the item for “Get Ready”

You may start by showing  the pictures and asking, “do we cut first or color first”.  Using “first” and “then” concepts allows your child to know there is a progression to activities and reflect on the order.  The child can point, answer or place the icons in order. 

Get Ready

Several strategies will assist the individual to be actively engaged in the “ Do” and “Get Ready” process.

  • Use picture icons that allow the child to point to or grasp to put in the “Get Ready” column. Using Velcro to keep the pictures in position may be helpful.
  • Use an augmentative communication device with a page that lists options and allowing the child to point to or use a stylus to access their selections individually. The child can then grasp the item to put into their “waiting area” bowl or box or you place them upon making their selection.

Summary

How does a child with neuromotor impairment that may lack the postural control to move, reach and communicate get the same opportunities to develop executive functioning skills as other children?  Structuring the learning opportunity and providing activities in a manner that supports their thought processes to plan and participate in the execution of tasks is important. Incorporating alternative strategies to minimize hand over hand assistance is the start.  The key is to  let the child do as much for themselves as possible both in terms of thought process and motor participation.  Learn more about Executive Functioning by listening to Therapro’s Lecture series on this and other topics.

References

Ward, S., & Jacobsen, K. (2014). A clinical model for developing executive function skills. Perspectives on Language Learning and Education, 21(2), 72-84.

What Is Executive Function? And How Does It Relate to Child Development? (N.D.) Center for the Developing Child Harvard University. https://developingchild.harvard.edu/resources/what-is-executive-function-and-how-does-it-relate-to-child-development/

Simple Hacks to Optimize Backpack Safety and Organization

by Cathy Collyer

One of the essential back-to-school items on every parent’s shopping list is a new backpack.  Beginning in preschool and progressing all the way through high school, kids use their backpacks every day.   As therapists, we are aware that how that backpack is filled and carried will either create problems for kids or solve them.   A pack that is too heavy, so full that it creates perceptual, sensory or cognitive roadblocks to organization, or missing essential tools for kids with special needs, is not doing it’s job.  With targeted education and the introduction of simple alternative strategies, we can improve the chances that backpacks end up helping every child perform well during this school year.

Here are some ways to help students manage their backpacks for optimal performance throughout the school year:

  • Lighten up. Kids tend to make their packs heavier than they need to be.  Hypermobile kids, kids with orthopedic issues and kids with low tone may be carrying packs that put them at significant risk for injury.  Make sure parents are aware of this issue, and help them by suggesting a review of backpack contents and downsizing the “essentials” whenever possible.  Small water bottles, travel sizes of toiletries, and a minimum number of pencils, pens or markers lighten the load.  For kids that aren’t aware of the sensory or cognitive overload of an overfilled pack, a backpack checklist or a smaller pack help them manage without an adult assuming responsibility for content management.

Highlighter Strips, a helpful tool for organization

  • Teach kids how to pack and wear their pack. The heaviest items should be carried close to the body and content weight should be distributed equally across the back. Kids should use both straps when wearing their backpack.  The one-shoulder carry can be preferred by middle-schoolers wishing to look “cool”.  This overweighting of one side of the body puts them off balance and at-risk for injury.  It may be hard to change habitual behavior in children at this age.  Try identifying the child or children who seem to be admired and copied by their peers.  Influencing the kids who are acknowledged social leaders can change class culture quickly.   Don’t wait until children report neck and shoulder pain, but remind parents and teachers that the risk of strains, sprains and exacerbations of issues seen in tweens and teens like scoliosis are real.
  • Frequently used items should be quickly accessible in surface pockets, and items they need for their first class are reachable when they open their pack, not packed under other materials. Laminated photos of pocket contents can help children learn the habits of efficient storage.

Tactile Ruler

  • Help kids remember to use their sensory tools by having them handy. Tools like Highlighter Strips and the Desk Buddy Multi-Textured Ruler are slim and can be left between pages of a book or workbook, ready to be used.  Calming tools like the Wristful Fidget can be worn, not shoved into a pack.  Since it looks like a sport wrap, kids aren’t as eager to toss it away when they pack up and go!  Kids may need more than one set of tools so that they can leave a set at school and another one at home. Items that do more than one job, like the Desk Buddy Ruler, have an advantage over carrying a bunch of fidgets and then an equal number of classroom tools.

Wrist Weights

  • Accept that altering behavior is a long game. Don’t get discouraged if kids only use some of these strategies to improve how they manage their backpacks.  Habits change slowly, and as the demands of the school year mount, it may take periodic reviews and revisions to find the right combination of equipment, organization and carrying strategies to make a difference!

Cathy Collyer, OTR, LMT, PLLC

Cathy Collyer, OTR, LMT has treated children with neurological, orthopedic and sensory processing disorders for over 20 years.  She is the author of The Practical Guide To Toilet Training Your Child With Low Muscle Tone.  Learn more about her work at tranquilbabies.com.