Saturday, October 4, 2014

Getting to Know Your International Contacts—Part 2


Executive Function

Executive function and self-regulation skills are key ingredients to lifelong performance. Executive function is the mental processes that enable us to plan, focus attention, remember instructions, and juggle multiple tasks successfully. Just as an air traffic control system at a busy airport safely manages the arrivals and departures of many aircraft on multiple runways, the brain needs this skill set to filter distractions, prioritize tasks, set and achieve goals, and control impulses.


When children have opportunities to develop executive function and self-regulation skills, individuals and society experience lifelong benefits.
These skills are crucial for learning and development. They also enable positive behavior and allow us to make healthy choices for ourselves and our families.


Executive function and self-regulation skills depend on three types of brain function: working memory, mental flexibility, and self-control. These functions are highly interrelated. Each type of skill draws on elements of the others, and the successful application of executive function skills requires them to operate in coordination with each other. 

  • Working memory governs our ability to retain and manipulate distinct pieces of information over short periods of time.  
  • Mental flexibility helps us to sustain or shift attention in response to different demands or to apply different rules in different settings. 
  • Self-control enables us to set priorities and resist impulsive actions or responses.
     
    Children aren’t born with these skills—they are born with the potential to develop them. If children do not get what they need from their relationships with adults and the conditions in their environments—or (worse) if those influences are sources of toxic stress—their skill development can be seriously delayed or impaired. Adverse environments resulting from neglect, abuse, and/or violence may expose children to toxic stress, which disrupts brain architecture and impairs the development of executive function. 

    Providing the support that children need to build these skills at home, in early care and education programs, and in other settings they experience regularly is one of society’s most important responsibilities. 
    Growth-promoting environments provide children with "scaffolding" that helps them practice necessary skills before they must perform them alone. Adults can facilitate the development of a child’s executive function skills by establishing routines, modeling social behavior, and creating and maintaining supportive, reliable relationships. It is also important for children to exercise their developing skills through activities that foster creative play and social connection, teach them how to cope with stress, involve vigorous exercise, and over time, provide opportunities for directing their own actions with decreasing adult supervision.
    I have been unable to receive any feedback from my international contact this week.

3 comments:

  1. I agree that children especially at an early age needs all the support to promote a healthy learning experience and development.In your post you mentioned the types of brain functions. The.The brain of young children is very much like a new computer. It has great potential for development, depending on what we as adults put into it. I truly believe early experiences greatly influence the way a person develops. Everyone who works with children has an awesome responsibility for the future of those children.

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  2. Children coming from "at-risk" backgrounds can have their cognitive development affected in a negative way, and I don't think many people realize to what extent cognitive development can be affected. Not all children coming from difficult backgrounds have negative cognitive development, but many do.

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  3. I do like the points you made, regardless of international contacts. I do think that self control is a hard concept for our early childhood students. I think that once Metacognition kicks in for them, then this becomes an easier process.

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