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Development of Executive Control Processes in Young Children

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Title: Development of Executive Control Processes in Young Children


1
Development of Executive Control Processesin
Young Children
  • Kerry Howland, M.S., CCC-SLP
  • Department of Speech,
  • Language and Hearing Sciences
  • Boston University

2
What Are Executive Control Processes?
  • Welsh and Pennington (1988) define Executive
    Functions as the ability to maintain an
    appropriate problem solving set for attainment of
    a future goal.
  • Diamond (2006) emphasizes the executive control
    skills are needed in conditions where going on
    automatic would lead one astray.

3
Executive Control Processes
  • Managing attentional focus
  • Engaging in goal directed behavior/Employing
    strategies
  • Inhibiting irrelevant/inappropriate responses
  • Planning
  • Prioritizing
  • Reflecting on the learning process
  • Taking anothers perspective

4
IMPACT OF EXECUTIVE CONTROL DEFICITS
  • Waber (2003) found that executive control skills
    predicted academic success more effectively than
    tests of academic achievement or cognitive
    ability.
  • Children with poor EC skills are at high risk for
    dropping out of school.
  • Children with poor EC skills are also at high
    risk for social/behavioral problems.
  • EC skills are essential to the development of
    theory of mind abilities.

5
Executive Systems
  • Generally associated with frontal systems,
    specifically the pre-frontal cortex
  • Pietrus (2005) Networks almost always have an
    office in the pre-frontal cortex.

6
Development of Executive Control Skills
  • The pre-frontal cortex is one of the last areas
    of the brain to fully develop.
  • Myelin is a coating on axons that serves to
    increase speed of transmission.
  • There is a rapid increase in myelination of the
    PFC during adolescence
  • This development continues through the early 20s.

7
Executive Control and Older Students
  • As educators, we have increasingly and
    appropriately focused on development of EC skills
    in middle school and high school
  • But... executive control skills dont suddenly
    emerge in adolescence. The foundation is laid in
    early childhood and builds throughout the school
    years.
  • We cant afford to wait until middle school to
    work on executive control.

8
Environmental Influences
  • Development of executive control is driven not
    just by maturation, but also by EXPERIENCE
  • Given the right experiences, children can improve
    executive control skills
  • Children who live in urban areas are at high risk
    for problems in executive control.

9
So...
  • We need a developmentally appropriate curriculum
    to directly teach executive control skills from
    the start of school.
  • Rather than problem behaviors that need to be
    managed, we need to think of executive control
    processes as skills to be developed

10
What does this have to do with speech and
language?
  • Executive control processes are intricately
    linked to language development.
  • Language is a primary tool for self-regulation,
    so the child with language deficits may, as a
    result, experience problems with executive
    control.
  • We cant escape the impact of EC skills in our
    therapy sessions!

11
Three Core Executive Control Skills
  • Working Memory
  • Planning
  • Inhibition

12
8-12 months
  • Working Memory
  • Emergence of object permanence.
  • Planning
  • Emergence of cause-effect and means-ends
    relations.
  • Inhibition
  • Detour Reaching
  • Searching for a displaced object

13
12-24 months
  • Working Memory
  • Large increase in vocabulary, ability to refer to
    objects not visibly present.
  • Persistence increases? tantrums and self directed
    behavior
  • Planning
  • Develops and sustains plan for accomplishing a
    goal.
  • Inhibition
  • Can inhibit actions that are not consistent with
    immediate goals.
  • Little self-regulation Adults act as regulators.

14
Pre-School Years
  • Working Memory
  • Can hold information on-line to recount
    experiences.
  • Keeps track of events in a story becomes
    interested in plot driven stories.
  • Planning
  • Major advance in ability to conceptualize beyond
    what is here and now.
  • Carries through on a sequence of events in play.
  • Change from 3-4 year olds in the degree of
    explicit planning during play.

15
Pre-School Years
  • Primary Goal Development of Inhibition
  • Significant changes in ability to self-manage
    inhibition occur between three and four years of
    age.
  • These changes co-occur and are thought to
    underlie the development of theory of mind skills.

16
Inhibition
  • The ability to stop a pre-potent response from
    occurring.
  • Often measured by Go/No Go Tasks
  • A fundamental ability that is key to
  • Regulating attention
  • Social adaptation
  • Effective learning
  • Inhibition is HARD WORK

17
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18
Development of Inhibition
  • 3 year olds can understand the rules to Go NO GO
    games, but they often cannot inhibit their
    response despite their knowledge (Carlson et al,
    2004).
  • 4 year olds begin to inhibit effectively.
  • Skill at inhibition continues to develop over the
    early school years.

19
Inhibition and Theory of Mind
  • We know 3 year old have trouble with TOM tasks.
  • Requires a high degree of working memory
  • Requires inhibition of the pre-potent response
    (the childs own knowledge)

20
Inhibition in Children at Risk for Language and
Reading Impairment
  • Inhibitory control is well established four years
    of age in typically developing children,
    especially those with pre-school experience.
  • For many of our at-risk children, development of
    inhibition lags behind.
  • Lack of inhibitory control becomes socially and
    academically penalizing by kindergarten and first
    grade

21
EC in Typical K-1st Grade Children
  • Development of planning skills predominates
  • Children create elaborate pretend play schemas
    with multiple roles.
  • Children begin to employ strategies in playing
    sports and board games.
  • Children begin to self regulate their behavior
    and use verbal mediation to do so.
  • Sustained attention increases dramatically.
  • EC skills are used heavily to acquire academic
    skills, especially reading.
  • All of these skills will be impeded if inhibition
    has not developed sufficiently.

22
Assessment of EC Skills in Young Children
  • Isquith BRIEF Pre-School Rating Scale.
  • Isquith Shape Box
  • Storybook characters of different shapes and
    colors.
  • Child names colors not shapes
  • Hats are added, child names shape of hat, or
    color of non-hatted character.
  • Dimensional Card Sort Game
  • Tower of Hanoi
  • CPT has been used with pre-schoolers.

23
Inhibition Skills in At-Risk Children
  • Boston Public School Early Learning Center
  • Children are teacher-referred for support in
    developing phonological awareness skills.
  • We noted that a high percentage of the k2-1st
    grade children who were referred had trouble with
    inhibition.

24
Facilitating Inhibition
  • Distance helps
  • Hala and Russel (2001) found that three year olds
    could perform strategic deception if they pointed
    with a pointer, not with their own hand.
  • Children perform more successfully on false
    location tasks if the change in location is
    described but not observed by the child.
  • Dowsett and Livesy (2000) found that inhibition
    can be directly taught
  • Performance on a go/no-go task improved after
    children practiced a cognitive flexibility task
    (similar to Wisconsin Card Sort).
  • Just training inhibition alone is not as
    effective as embedding inhibition into a more
    complex task.

25
Incorporating Inhibition Into Therapy
  • Games
  • Visual Reminders
  • Prophylactic Cueing

26
Combining Inhibition and Phonological Awareness
  • Tap the card that starts with a given sound?
    suppress responses to other cards.
  • Feed cards with target sounds to puppet, throw
    the others in the trash.
  • Variations on UNO (letter and color rather than
    number and color).
  • Board Games that require go/no-go responses.
  • Earning an inhibition game as a reward for
    successful participation in the session.

27
Games to Develop Inhibition
  • Duck Duck Goose
  • Freeze Tag
  • Simon Says (simplify for the younger child, do
    what the good puppet says, not what the
    naughty puppet says).
  • Slap (Tap) Jack (we do this with letters)
  • Musical Chairs
  • Mother May I?

28
Visual Reminders
  • Rule board with simple visual symbols. (we use
    boardmaker symbols)
  • Thought bubbles and whispered responses to help
    inhibit talking out of turn.
  • Self-cues
  • Fingers to lips to inhibit talking
  • Hands behind back to help resist touching
    materials.

29
Prophylactic Cueing
  • Treat inhibition as a skill that is being taught.
  • Cue and remind before mistakes are made.
  • If needed cue continuously through the no-go
    time.
  • Set small goals and make them attainable.
  • Make it motivating, fun and desirable to inhibit.

30
Perspective Taking
  • Inhibition co-develops with theory of mind
    skills.
  • Build theory of mind games into circle time
    activities.
  • Play barrier games in the classroom.
  • Discuss character perspectives, feelings and
    during story telling activities.

31
Building Planning Skills
  • K0/K1
  • Plan out pretend play scenarios, participate in
    pretend play with the children.
  • Give out roles, discuss the story line of the
    play
  • Plan out art activities with a visual sequence of
    steps to be followed
  • K2/1st grade
  • Emphasize planning in story telling activities
    (what is the problem, how can they solve the
    problem? What should they do first?)
  • Plan aloud group projects like science
    experiments. Use visual cues for each step of
    the plan.
  • Verbalize your own planning process in simple
    terms throughout the school day.
  • Readers Theater is a great way to combine
    planning, perspective taking, inhibition and
    reading fluency

32
Strategies to Remember
  • Keep in mind that you are teaching a skill not
    managing a behavior this will free you up to
    bring your expertise as a teacher!
  • Remember the child may not be able to inhibit a
    response even when he or she knows and can recite
    the rule.
  • Provide a behavior to replace the one that needs
    to be inhibited Tell the child what TO do.
  • Break the skill into manageable steps.
  • Use visual cues to remind children what is
    expected.
  • Remind often, scold seldom.
  • Give the child a way to remind themselves.
  • Use rewards and motivators. Executive control is
    hard work!

33
References
  • Carlson, S.M., Moses, L.J. Claxton, L.J.
    (2004). Individual differences in executive
    functioning and theory of mind An investigation
    of inhibitory control and planning ability.
    Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 87,
    299-319.
  • Davidson, M.C., Amso, D., Anderson, L.C.,
    Diamond, A. (2006). Development of cognitive
    control and executive functions from 4-13 years
    evidence from manipulations of memory,
    inhibition, and task switching.
    Neuropsychologia, 44, 2037-2078.
  • Diamond, A. (2006) The Early Development of
    Executive Functions. In Bialystok, E., Craik,
    F., Lifespan Cognition, New York, Oxford
    University Press.
  • Dowsett, S.M. Livesy, D.J. (2000). The
    development of inhihibitory control in
    pre-school children Effects of executive skill
    training. Developmental Psychobiology, 362,
    161-174.
  • Eslinger, P.J., Flaherty-Craig, C.V. Benton,
    A.L. (2004). Developmental outcomes after early
    prefrontal cortex damage. Brain and Cognition,
    84-103.
  • Hala, S. Russell, J. (2001). Executive
    control within strategic deception A window on
    early cognitive development. Journal of
    Experimental Child Psychology, 80, 112-141.
  • Handley, S.J., Capon, A., Dennis, B.I. Evans,
    J.St.B.T. (2004). Working memory, inhibitory
    control and the development of childrens
    reasoning. Thinking and Reasoning, 102,
    175-195.
  • Happaney, K., Zelazo, P.D., Stuss, D.T. (2004).
    Development of orbitofrontal function current
    themes and future directions. Brain and
    Cognition, 25, 1-10.
  • Hughes, C., Graham, A., Grayson, A. (2004 )
    Executive functions in childhood development
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  • Isquith, P.K., Gioia, G.A, Epsy, K.A. (2004).
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  • Leon-Carrion, J., Garcia-Orza, J.
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  • Mahone, E.M., Pillion, J.P., Hoffman, J.,
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