Executive Function
Executive Functions 2
Domains & Skills
Domains & Skills 2
The Brain
100

Cognitive processes that help us self-regulate to effectively plan, prioritize, sustain long-term goals

What is executive functioning?

100

The ability to adapt thinking and behavior to changing situations, a core aspect of executive functions that includes planning, focusing, and managing multiple tasks

What is Flexibility? 

100

Creating a "roadmap" to completing a task or goal. Setting goals, defining actions to achieve those goals, and organizing the resources and efforts needed to carry out those actions.

Planning

100

Ability to effectively start and begin a task or project, demonstrating the capacity to overcome procrastination and get things moving in a timely manner  

What is "task initiation"?

100

Located at the front of the brain, is crucial for higher-level cognitive functions like planning, decision-making, problem-solving, and controlling emotions and behaviors, as well as voluntary movement and speech

What is the Frontal Lobe? 

200

Planning, Organizing, Problem-Solving (Task Initiation), Multi-Tasking (Flexible Thinking), Inhibition Control (Impulses), Working Memory, Delay Aversion (Self-Monitoring), and Emotional Regulation

What are the 8 domains of Executive Functioning Skills? 

200

The ability to suppress impulsive or automatic responses and behaviors, allowing for more thoughtful and goal-directed actions

What is Inhibitory Control? 

200

The ability to resist acting on immediate desires or impulses without considering the consequences. Skills where you "stop, think, choose" idea.

What is Impulse Control? 

200

Someone who possesses the skills and mindset to identify, analyze, and effectively resolve issues or challenges

What is a Problem-Solver? 

200

Located in the frontal lobe behind the forehead and is one of the last parts of the brain to fully develop, typically maturing into the mid-to-late 20s

What is the Pre-Frontal Cortex?

300

It's crucial because they form the foundation for life-long success in areas like critical thinking, problem-solving, planning, and decision-making, impacting everything from academic performance to social interactions and overall well-being

Why is it important to learn executive functioning skills?

300

A way of thinking and acting that emphasizes adaptability, resourcefulness, and proactive opportunism, mirroring the survival strategies of early human societies that relied on hunting and gathering for sustenance.

What is "Hunter-Gatherer-Mindset" ?

300

The ability to manage time, prioritize tasks, set goals, and develop systems to achieve objectives, ultimately leading to efficient and effective performance

What are Organization Skills?

300

Ability to effectively manage and respond to emotional experiences, encompassing both the conscious and unconscious processes used to influence which emotions we have, when we have them, and how we experience and express them

What is Emotional Regulation? 

300

Chemical messengers that transmit signals between neurons (nerve cells) and other target cells in the body. They play a crucial role in various physiological and psychological functions.

What are Neurotransmitters? 

400

Emitted from screens and can impact the frontal lobe, affecting cognitive functions like attention, alertness, and working memory, and sleep disruptions.

What is Blue Light?

400

Associated with conditions like ADHD, Autism, anxiety, and mood disorders.

What are related Mental Health concerns to Executive Functioning?

400

The act of intentionally delaying or putting off tasks or decisions, despite knowing that doing so may have negative consequences

What is Procrastination? 

400

Cognitive system that temporarily stores and manipulates information needed for complex tasks like language comprehension, learning, and reasoning

What is Working Memory?

400

Neurotransmitter associated with pleasure, reward, and movement

What is Dopamine?

500

When does Executive Functioning Develop? 

Develops gradually throughout childhood and adolescence, with most skills maturing by the early to mid-20s, though some continue to refine into the third decade of life. 

(Ever Changing and Developing)

500

The brain's ability to change and adapt due to experience, reorganizing neural networks, and forming new connections throughout life

What is Neuroplasticity?

500

The awareness of one's thought processes and an understanding of the patterns behind them. The term comes from the root word meta, meaning "beyond"

What is Metacognition? 

500

Someone who can adapt to new situations, change their approach to problems, and consider different perspectives, rather than rigidly sticking to one way of thinking or doing things

What does it mean to be a 'flexible" thinker?

500

Neurotransmitter involved in mood regulation, sleep, and appetite

What is Serotonin?  

M
e
n
u