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Practical Intervention in the Schools Series

Executive Skills in Children and Adolescents: A Practical Guide to Assessment and Intervention

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Concise and practitioner friendly, this bestselling guide has helped put executive skills on the map for school&mdashbased clinicians and educators. The book explains how these critical congnitive processes develop and why they play such a key role in children's behavior and school preformance. Provided are step—by—step guidelines and many practical tools to promote executive skill developement by implementing environmental modifications, individualized instruction, coaching, and whole—class interventions. In a largesize format with convenient lay—flat binding, the book includes more than two dozen reproducible assessment tools, checklists, and planning sheets.


Revised and expanded to relfect significant advances in the field Chapter on classroom teaching routines that target executive skills during daily work and instruction. Chapters on integrating executive skills strategies into a response&mdash:to—intervention model and managing transitions to new grade or school. More reproducibles, one of the book's most popular features. Increased attention to children who don't have a specofo learning disorder but still struggle in school.

129 pages, Paperback

First published September 26, 2003

22 people are currently reading
572 people want to read

About the author

Peg Dawson

27 books38 followers
Peg Dawson, Ed.D., received her doctorate in school/child clinical psychology from the University of Virginia. She worked as a school psychologist for 16 years in Maine and New Hampshire, and, for the past 18 years has worked at the Center for Learning and Attention Disorders in Portsmouth, New Hampshire, where she
specializes in the assessments of children and adults with learning and attention disorders and provides training on assessment, attention deficits, learning disabilities and executive skills.
Peg has many years of organizational experience at the state, national, and international level, and served in many capacities, including president, of the New Hampshire Association of School Psychologists, the National Association of School Psychologists, and the International School Psychology Association. She has also participated in many of NASP’s leadership initiatives, including the Futures Conference and the development of both the second and third Blueprint for the Training and Practice of School Psychology. She is the 2006 recipient of the National Association of School Psychologists’ Lifetime Achievement Award.
Peg has written numerous articles and book chapters on retention, ability grouping, reading disorders, attention disorders, the use of interviews in the assessment process, and homework. Along with her colleague, Dr. Richard Guare, she has written several books, including a manual on coaching students with attention disorders as well as books for both parents and professionals on executive skills.

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5 stars
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3 stars
33 (12%)
2 stars
7 (2%)
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Displaying 1 - 21 of 21 reviews
Profile Image for Mark.
320 reviews3 followers
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July 21, 2021
If you are a learning support teacher, parent, guidance counselor or otherwise associated with educational enterprises, and you are looking for a good book on executive skills--what they are and how they affect learning and behavior in the classroom, how to assess them in children and adolescents, and how to coach students who struggle with these essential cognitive skills--than this is a book well worth reading. Moreover, its generous menu of solutions and interventions for remedying weaknesses in executive skills are indispensable and therefore well worth trying out with your students or children.
Profile Image for Juliana Haught.
202 reviews1 follower
June 12, 2018
I read this years ago, and now treat this book more as a reference book. This goes over what the term "executive skills" means (no, it's not to be a company executive), and the ways that challenges with any of those areas affect children at home and school, and various accommodations and interventions to help.
Profile Image for Nathalie Van Beek.
403 reviews10 followers
March 5, 2021
Een heel fijn naslagwerk, minder geschikt om als 'studeerboek' in zijn geheel door te lezen, maar toch leerzaam. Er staan talloze praktische voorbeelden in en stappenplannen om te gebruiken, voornamelijk voor schoolse situaties. Ik ga dit boek vast nog vaak erbij pakken om iets op te zoeken!
Profile Image for Jennifer Park.
18 reviews
February 6, 2022
This will be a book I will keep coming back to. After interrupted and remote learning, students are struggling to keep up. I have a feeling it’s due to a lack of executive functioning skills.
Profile Image for Tom.
23 reviews6 followers
November 13, 2023
Reads like something out of the 50s. One step away from corporal punishment.
Profile Image for Alison.
1,453 reviews8 followers
December 11, 2025
The best practical guide for intervention with ADHD deficits and executive functioning in the classroom.
Profile Image for Jessica.
43 reviews
March 8, 2017
I can absolutely see myself using many of these strategies and assessments in my work. I thought the vignettes and reproducible assessments were great tools for understanding how executive functioning deficits impact students of all ages. Unlike many other professional books on the subject, this book did not ignore that strategies can be very different for middle/high school students. Often, I read executive functioning books and find them geared toward elementary students only. The strategies shared here were age respectful and adaptable.
17 reviews
May 25, 2011
I homeschool a daughter who is dyslexic and has some major deficiencies in these areas. I loved this book! It gave me concrete ways to help her grow that organizational muscle memory in appropriate ways! It isn't written for someone who just wants skim. It's written for those who need specific ideas on how to help those children with these problems. I highly recommend.
Profile Image for Becca.
228 reviews9 followers
July 26, 2011
I read this to screen it for possible use as a reference for my grad students. It's pretty good as far as that goes. Although I was also hoping for some new insight into teaching my middle schoolers. It's only okay on that front. Ah well.
Profile Image for Christina.
18 reviews5 followers
September 1, 2011
For educators not for parents. Excellent book. If you want to read the parent version, check out "Smart but Scattered" by the same authors. Will be using this a lot in my classes this year (and in my family!)
Profile Image for Linda.
318 reviews1 follower
July 29, 2012
Not as useful as I expected but added a few strategies to the repertoire. Interesting to read in light of Russell Barkley's revisionist thinking.
Profile Image for Briana.
1,521 reviews
August 14, 2017
Easy to follow explanation of executive function and how it develops over time. If your students are scattered and ADHD-like, this book may prove insightful.
7 reviews
August 16, 2014
If you are trying to understand why your child, or your student, or your client are struggling, this could be a good read for you. I've used it primarily for work related purposes.
Profile Image for Christine.
61 reviews2 followers
December 18, 2015
Excellent resource with information and tools that can be used immediately to build & reinforce executive function skills in students both inthe classroom and 1:1
Profile Image for Emma.
161 reviews
April 25, 2016
Very clinical, but full of good applicable advise.
603 reviews4 followers
June 20, 2022
Helpful but nothing earth shattering
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Displaying 1 - 21 of 21 reviews

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