What is executive functioning
Executive functioning is a simple way to describe the brain skills we use to manage everyday life.
It covers things like:
- planning and organising tasks
- decision making
- problem solving
- time management
- impulse control
Action for Children explains that executive functions help people plan, prioritise and remember things, and some children find these skills harder than others. (parents.actionforchildren.org.uk)
If you want a parent friendly definition: executive functioning is how your child’s brain manages the steps between “I need to do this” and “it’s done”.
Signs your child may be struggling with planning and organisation
Children develop these skills gradually. A wobbly week is normal. A persistent pattern can be a sign your child needs more support with executive functioning.
Common signs include:
- forgetting instructions quickly
- losing school items often
- struggling to start tasks, even easy ones
- leaving tasks half done
- getting overwhelmed by multi step jobs
- poor time sense, rushing, or constant lateness
- emotional blow ups when a task feels too big
Berkshire Healthcare NHS notes executive functioning difficulties can include planning and organising a task and time management. (berkshirehealthcare.nhs.uk)
Why executive functioning skills are hard for some children
Executive functioning varies between children. It can also dip when a child is:
- tired
- anxious
- hungry
- overwhelmed
- dealing with change or stress
For some children, executive functioning difficulties are linked to neurodivergence, including ADHD. Just One Norfolk NHS notes neurodivergent conditions can affect executive function and describes executive functioning as the ability to plan and carry out tasks and organise life. (Just One Norfolk)
The goal of this page is not to diagnose. It is to give you practical tools that help whether your child is neurotypical, neurodivergent, or still being assessed.
4) The core skills: planning, organisation, working memory, and time
A helpful way to support executive functioning is to name the skill your child is missing, then build a simple “support” around it.
Planning
Planning means seeing the steps and the order.
What do I do first?
What do I need?
What do I need?
Organisation
Organisation means knowing where things live and being able to find them.
book bag routine
labelled storage
a single place for homework
Working memory
Working memory is holding steps in mind while doing them.
This is why children often forget the first instruction when you give three at once.
Time management
Time can feel invisible. Many children need time to be made visible with timers, countdowns, or checklists.
Practical home strategies that build executive functioning
These are high impact strategies that many UK families find realistic.
A) Use routines that do the thinking
Routines reduce decision overload. Sheffield Children’s NHS recommends creating routines and using rewards to reinforce positive behaviour. (Sheffield Children’s Library)
Start with two routines:
- morning routine
- bedtime routine
Keep each routine to 4 to 6 steps.
B) Make the plan visible
For executive functioning, visuals often work better than repeated reminders:
- a checklist on the fridge
- a picture routine for younger children
- a whiteboard with three “today” tasks
C) Use the rule of one
Give one instruction. Wait. Then the next instruction.
This supports working memory and reduces arguments.
D) Break tasks into tiny steps
Instead of “Tidy your room”:
- Put dirty clothes in the basket.
- Put books on the shelf.
- Put toys in the box.
Small steps reduce overwhelm and increase success.
E) Externalise time
Use:
- a visual timer
- a kitchen timer
- phone alarms for older children
Time becomes something your child can see, not something they must guess.
F) Use “start help” rather than “nag help”
Many children struggle with the first step. Try:
- “Shall we do the first step together?”
- “Let’s set the timer for 2 minutes and begin.”
G) Keep storage simple
Organisation fails when systems are too complicated.
Use:
- one tray for school letters
- one box for homework supplies
- one hook for coat and bag
Homework and mornings: two routines that change everything
Homework routine for executive functioning
Try this simple structure:
snack and decompression
10 minute work sprint
3 minute movement break
repeat
pack bag for tomorrow
This supports attention, memory, and time.
Morning routine for executive functioning
Morning stress often comes from too many decisions.
Try:
- clothes laid out the night before
- breakfast choices limited to two options
- checklist by the door: bag, water bottle, coat
Aim for fewer words, more structure.
Supporting teens: independence without constant conflict
Teen executive functioning is still developing. Teens often want independence, but still need structure.
What helps:
a weekly planning check in (10 minutes, same day each week)
one shared calendar for deadlines
a “three priorities” rule for school nights
body doubling for homework: you work nearby, they work too
A key principle: support the system, not the person.
If the system works, your teen needs fewer reminders.
Getting help in the UK: school support, SENCO, and next steps
If executive functioning difficulties are affecting learning, school can help.
The graduated approach in England
The SEND Code of Practice sets out the SEND system and expectations for support in England.
Many local authority documents summarise the graduated approach as a cycle of assess, plan, do, review. (South Gloucestershire Council)
Practical school support may include:
chunked instructions
Visual timetables
Movement breaks
Check ins for organisation
Assistive tech for planning
If ADHD is part of the picture
NICE guideline NG87 covers ADHD recognition, diagnosis, and management. It notes that for children under 5 with ADHD, an ADHD focused group parent training programme is offered as first line treatment.
YoungMinds reminds parents that school support should be based on needs, not diagnosis, and suggests meeting with the SENCO.
FAQs: executive functioning
It is the brain’s management system for getting things done. It includes planning, organising, and time management. (berkshirehealthcare.nhs.uk)
Not always. Many things can affect executive functioning, including stress and sleep. But ADHD and other neurodivergent profiles can be linked to executive functioning difficulties. (Just One Norfolk)
Use external structure: routines, checklists, timers, and small steps. Keep systems simple and consistent.
Yes. Schools can support based on need. YoungMinds notes this and recommends involving the SENCO. (YoungMinds)
If planning and organisation difficulties are affecting school progress, friendships, self esteem, or family life for weeks or months, speak to school and your GP.

