The first report card is a snapshot, not a verdict. It tells you where systems are breaking down and where executive functioning skills need a boost. With a few targeted moves, you can tighten routines and see progress before winter break. This is a great time to reset.
If you want a plan tailored to your child, our executive function coaches work with families across Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and surrounding areas.
Start with one-week goals, not resolutions
Big overhauls collapse under holiday schedules. Choose two targets:
- Homework start on time
- Materials packed the night before
Write these as simple goal setting statements: “Start math by 4:15,” “Pack bag at 8:00.” Post them where your child works. Review nightly for one week, then keep or swap goals.
Make time visible to protect working memory
When time is abstract, kids stall. Externalize it:
- Use a large analog clock or timer during homework.
- Estimate how long each task will take, then check the actual time and adjust.
- Run two 20–25 minute work blocks with short movement breaks.
This frees working memory to focus on the task instead of juggling minutes.
Build start-up and shutdown routines
Two short checklists cover most issues:
- Start-up (3 minutes): open planner, list top three tasks, set timer, begin.
- Shutdown (3 minutes): pack bag, stage tomorrow’s clothes, set alarm, place the planner by the backpack.
Tape both lists to the desk. For younger children, make them visual with icons.
Break assignments into do-able chunks
Vague tasks drain attention. Convert each assignment into three steps max:
- “Read pages 10–14” → “Preview headings, read 2 pages, write 3 notes.”
- “Study vocab” → “Make 6 cards, test 3, retest misses.”
Chunking keeps students moving and reduces avoidance.
Train cognitive flexibility on purpose
Kids make gains faster when they practice switching strategies. To grow executive functioning skills that stay cognitively flexible:
- Use “Plan A / Plan B.” If highlighting fails, switch to teaching it aloud or writing a summary.
- During review, mix two subjects in the same session.
- After each block, ask: “What worked? What’s my Plan B if this stalls tomorrow?”
Small switches build adaptability — the skill that carries through midterms and beyond.
Use games to strengthen EF (and keep motivation up)
Skill-building can be fun. Pick 10-minute options that play games with attention, memory, and flexible thinking:
- Working memory: backward digit repeats, “I’m going on a trip” with categories.
- Inhibition: “Simon Says,” freeze dance, Go/No-Go apps.
- Flexibility: “Set,” “Spot It!,” or rule-switch Uno (change color/number rules mid-round).
With younger children, keep wins frequent and instructions simple. With older students, add light time pressure for a challenge.
Simplify materials management
Lost folders cost more time than tough content. Standardize:
- One binder or notebook per class, color-coded.
- A single home base for supplies.
- End-of-day two-minute backpack sweep.
- Photograph whiteboards or assignment slides (if permitted) to avoid copy errors.
Consistency beats perfection. Keep the system the same all year.
Coach the communication loop
When students hit a wall, teach brief help requests:
- “I tried X and Y; I’m stuck on Z. Can we review the first step?”
- Email template for older students: one paragraph stating the task, barrier, and question.
This builds self-advocacy and saves everyone time.
Troubleshooting quick hits
- “Can’t get started.” Shrink the first step to 60–90 seconds and start the timer. Praise initiation, not completion.
- “Meltdowns during math.” Move math earlier, cut the set in half, and interleave one easy problem between hard ones.
- “Planner is empty.” Tie capture to the same class period daily and have a teacher initial for three days to form the habit.
- “Stuck on one strategy.” Run Plan A for one block, then require a Plan B attempt for the next block to stay cognitively flexible.
What progress looks like in two weeks
- Homework starts within five minutes of planned time
- Fewer back-and-forths about missing materials
- Shorter work blocks with higher follow-through
- More accurate time estimates and calmer evenings
These are the “small wins” that compound between now and winter break.
Need a quick reset before the holidays?
Manhattan Psychology Group offers rapid-start executive function coaching that targets executive functioning skills your child can use immediately — working memory supports, goal setting, planner routines, and flexibility drills that keep motivation high. We see families in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and nearby communities.
Ready to build a system that sticks through winter break and into the new term? Let’s make a plan.
