Executive functions are the brain’s management system. They support goal-directed learning and are essential for managing the cognitive demands of reading and writing.
Executive functions include:
When these skills are fragile, capable learners may appear inconsistent or overwhelmed.
Working memory supports holding and manipulating information during tasks such as decoding, integrating meaning across sentences, planning written output, and revising text. When cognitive load exceeds working-memory capacity, performance breaks down even when understanding is present.
Executive-function challenges may affect:
EF differences commonly co-occur with dyslexia, ADHD, and anxiety, and can amplify literacy difficulty if not addressed directly.
Indicators may include:
These behaviours reflect cognitive constraints, not effort or motivation.
Cognitive overload and repeated difficulty can lead to avoidance, heightened anxiety, and reduced self-efficacy. Instruction that reduces cognitive load and builds self-regulatory capacity supports both literacy performance and emotional resilience.
Instruction incorporates:
EF supports are integrated with self-regulation instruction: goal setting, self-monitoring, strategy adjustment, and reflection. These tools are taught explicitly and gradually internalized to strengthen independence.
Every learner deserves instruction that reflects their unique strengths and needs. Connect with us to explore the right next steps for dyslexia and learning support.