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It was bright orange and boxy. I had used it repeatedly to "catch air," plowing over snow piles at high speed in school parking lots during the winter. Doing these stunts was safe, I reasoned: It was the family sedan, a Volvo, and at 16, I was invincible.
Sure, my head spun every hour of every day with school assignments, invented worries, real anxieties, fart jokes, satire, and politics in my American Civ class—denying my growing zit population, crushing on the girl in fifth period Trig class, memorizing lyrics to Eagles’ songs, and getting ready for the dance Friday night. I couldn’t really do anything wrong, I was sure.
Late one afternoon, I pulled around the back of our house and up the slope to park in the leveled carport near the back door. I turned off the engine, twisted the keys from the ignition, grabbed my jacket and books from the passenger seat, and launched out of the car, slamming the door behind me. Once in the house, I dumped my notebooks in my downstairs bedroom and enjoyed after-school. I was one bite into the second of three molasses cookies when the phone rang. It was Mr. Clark, our neighbor.
"Rick," he said, "You’ll probably want to look out your back window. It’s a quite a sight." Then he chuckled and hung up. Mid-chew, I raced to the window and stared.
There was my orange Volvo sitting all by itself in the center of the tall grass meadow that bordered our back property line. The car had traveled 50 yards, then mauled the 8-foot high bamboo stand separating our backyard from the meadow. I stared at the deep grooves the car had made, tracing them back up to where I had parked the car only moments ago. Parked, I thought, oh crap! I hadn’t put it in gear or set the parking brake.
Sound familiar? I was having a problem with executive function.
Executive function (EF) is the set of mental processes that help us plan, organize, strategize, pay attention to details, and manage time. All of us have issues with EF from time to time, even as adults. Executive function in the pre-frontal cortex of the adolescent brain is intermittent at best.
Many of the skills associated with EF are good for all students to learn and practice, not just those with identified EF challenges.
And just what are those EF skills? In their book, Smart but Scattered Teens: The "Executive Skills" Program for Helping Teens Reach Their Potential, Richard Guare, Peg Dawson, and Colin Guare cite the following:
Students in my classes over the years have blurted out highly inappropriate comments only to have maturity catch up with the front of their brains seconds later. They don’t think it’s cheating to copy others’ homework when they already understand a concept. They think jumping off a one-story building will work just fine if they have an opened umbrella to slow them down. They shoplift a Snickers bar even if they have the cash to pay for it.
Some students swear they can wake up 10 minutes before the bus arrives and be on time for school—and they do arrive on time, but they forget to bring three assignments and one permission slip that are due that day, so they call Mom to see if she can bring those things to school on her way to work, and oh, could she bring some lunch money, too?
Raise your hands if you recognize this student in your classes:
She demonstrates "learned helplessness," citing fixable problems as excuses for why she can’t start the assignment, such as she doesn’t have a pen, she doesn’t know which page to use, and she can’t find her folder on the computer.
Some students’ EF capacities are slower to mature, and they need additional assistance from teachers. Unfortunately, many teachers are not trained in how to help students develop these EF skills, especially those students who are identified with challenging learning disabilities or attention deficits.
In addition, when students struggle academically and emotionally, we tend to blame the student. "Come on," the words tumble out of our mouths, "step it up, get organized, use your time wisely, show respect, and get your act together."
These comments are a little like telling a student who doesn’t speak our language that he is intellectually incapacitated. As Todd Whitaker would say, who’s the slow learner here?
No single strategy will work with every student, nor is there one magical strategy that will solve one student’s EF problems. It’s always going to involve multiple strategies implemented in concert. Successful teachers are dynamic in their approach, too, adjusting EF strategies as students mature.
Here are some of the strategies that promote EF success:
Despite the less-than-stellar development in EF when I was 16, I’m a successful dad, husband, and educator. We all get there. Let’s not hold lack of EF development against students. Instead, let’s use it as a platform for self-awareness and creative problem-solving – you know, maturation. The Eagles were right back then, and they’re right for EF-challenged students today: "Take it easy. Don’t let the sound of your own wheels make you crazy."
Rick Wormeli is is a long-time teacher, consultant, and writer living in Herndon, Virginia. His newly released book, The Collected Writings (So Far) of Rick Wormeli: Crazy Good Stuff I... is available from AMLE at www.amle.org rwormeli@cox.net. @rickwormeli
Bring Rick Wormeli to your school. Contact AMLE Director of Middle Level Services, Dru Tomlin at dtomlin@amle.org for more information.
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