Executive Function and the Gifted Child: A Guide for Parents

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Publicado en:Parenting for High Potential vol. 14, no. 2 (Jun 2025), p. 6-10
Autor principal: Sodergren, Celeste
Otros Autores: Bright, Sarah
Publicado:
National Association for Gifted Children Gifted Child Quarterly
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Acceso en línea:Citation/Abstract
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245 1 |a Executive Function and the Gifted Child: A Guide for Parents 
260 |b National Association for Gifted Children Gifted Child Quarterly  |c Jun 2025 
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520 3 |a Executive function (EF) is a term that describes a set of skills that play an important role in the development of children's abilities to be prepared for and successful in accessing academic and social growth. The ability to self-regulate emotions and impulse control, switch attention between tasks, optimize working memory, and hold information in your head while acquiring more information are all executive function skills. Executive functioning skills become especially critical when students reach middle-school age and are faced with situations and assignments requiring them to manage stress and use such skills as critical problem solving, strong communication, conflict management skills, persistence and working through challenges, task initiation, time management, responsible decisionmaking, and project planning. [...]the crucial development of time management, task initiation, intentional focus and persistence through obstacles are skills typically developed in the high school years, but many gifted students face this development earlier in middle school. 
653 |a Problem solving 
653 |a Parents & parenting 
653 |a Exercise 
653 |a Hormones 
653 |a Students 
653 |a Memory 
653 |a Gifted children 
653 |a Gifted education 
653 |a Cognition & reasoning 
653 |a Martial arts 
653 |a Planning 
653 |a Flexibility 
653 |a Time management 
653 |a Children & youth 
653 |a Metacognition 
653 |a Middle schools 
653 |a Caregivers 
653 |a Learning 
653 |a Executive function 
653 |a Helplessness 
653 |a Child Role 
653 |a Young Children 
653 |a Short Term Memory 
653 |a Parents 
653 |a Psychological Patterns 
653 |a Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder 
653 |a Adults 
653 |a Child Development 
653 |a Adolescent Development 
653 |a Emotional Response 
653 |a Academically Gifted 
653 |a Middle School Teachers 
653 |a Stress Management 
700 1 |a Bright, Sarah 
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