If you are a parent seeking an intervention program that will develop social-emotional competence for your child, you will not be surprised at how many more of these promising programs exist today than existed only a decade ago. On the contrary, you may be surprised to find out that although researchers have conducted a myriad of studies in the area of social-emotional development and have both indirectly and directly linked executive function as an important variable in social-emotional interventions, executive function intervention is rarely considered, let alone included as a component of social-emotional intervention programs.
To reduce the ambiguity of these complex terms, here are simple explanations for each:
- Social-emotional competence is defined as one’s ability to resist reacting impulsively toward something or someone; being aware of one’s own feelings and managing them; accurately perceiving others’ points of view; accurately identifying problems; and suggesting appropriate and positive solutions and goals (Zins, Elias, Greenberg, & Weissberg, 2000). When children demonstrate mastery of these skills, they are said to be socially and emotionally competent.
- Executive function is defined as the skills necessary to participate in purposeful, goal-directed activities. These skills include the ability to inhibit impulses, shift attention from one task to another, plan, initiate tasks, and utilize working-memory (Luria, 1966; Pennington & Ozonoff, 1996).
You may have recognized that many of the executive function skills and the social-emotional skills are alike, such as problem-solving and resisting impulsive behavior. Why then, is executive functioning not considered to be an integral component of social-emotional interventions? If current research implies that deficiencies in executive functioning are related to difficulties in domains of social-emotional functioning, then intervention programs that promote social-emotional competence should include tasks that strengthen executive functioning.
Posted on
Fri, August 26, 2011
by Dr. Karina Poirier
filed under