Webinar: Executive Functions and Apps
Students with executive dysfunction have difficulty
organizing themselves and executing tasks in a timely and organized way. Key components
of executive function involve focus, direction, time management, prioritizing
and regulating behaviour.
Time management involves planning, prioritizing, working
memory, organizing your thinking, controlling emotions, sustaining attention.,
adaptability, reacting to change and the ability to store, retrieve and put
things into action.
The following is a brief overview of the apps that were
introduced in the webinar:
Colorful aquarium
is a good app for calming down. It soothes the user and takes their mind off of
previous problems. You can feed the fish and watch them eat so it is
interactive as well. It could also be used as a reward.
Tools for Students
is an app for planning and prioritizing, as in graphic organizers. There are 25
templates to initiate and plan ideas. You can use voice to input so it is great
even for those who have trouble writing. It saves automatically and it can be
emailed to teacher. You can summarize, sequence, use KWL chats, compare and
contras all for 99 cents.
Reminders is an app that is free. It has a calendar
and you can do notes and more information such as times and reminders, which will
pop up. It is just a good simple organizer
Take a Chill is a
stress reduction app focusing on adolescence to help students to take a moment
to calm or ground themselves before beginning a task. You need to be able to
read so it would not be good for early readers. It has “stop and take a moment”
component which explains how to stop and regroup to get ready to continue.
It gives you a “Daily Dose” which are strategies to get
through your day. You can take a stress inventory to track your stress and it
gives you an idea of how much stress you have at that moment. It gives you some
options and things you might consider to calm down. It provides stress
resources and links and has a journal to record your feelings.
Let Panic Go is a
good app for panic attacks or heightened stress. It is for students who read
well and have good working memory. You have to read and process at the same
time. This app is $2.99 and would be for higher elementary students to adults.
It has a breathing regulator where you touch the screen when you are exhaling
and it tracks your breaths. It asks you how you are feeling. If you say “good”
it gives you some tips to move on, if not, you can continue. It has a running commentary
which helps you to calm down.
Balloon Pop, Yoga
and other apps help with calming. Specific students can choose which
ones work best for them.
Sound Curtain is
an app that helps to sustain attention. It is acoustic masking. It adjusts
sound output to the sound in the environment. Headphones play and mask with
ambient sound. It helps drown out environmental sound. You can choose between
rain, wind and music to enhance attention, reduce distractibility and focus.
The Ibook Store offers enhanced books. Such as
Life on Earth. Students who need to be engaged more than a they are with a regular
text or what is on the board or a handout sheet would love Ibooks. Students can interact with pictures in the
text by manipulating them. Companies will also be able to update their books
very easily and send out updates to the text books. You can see the text, hear
it and interact with it. Students will pay attention and be more engaged. This
is an example of universal design for learning UDL.
Timers
traditionally were expensive and lost and would run out of batteries. This app
is 99 cents. It can travel with the student and cannot be broken or lost. It
helps with time management and time tracking. It is great for students with ASD
to help them learn to wait and for anyone to understand time. It looks like a
simple clock with a visual to show remaining time.
Student Life Organizer
is a calendar type of app that can add dates, courses and tasks for various
courses. This would be for Jr or Sr high students.
Each device comes with a built in calendar. It is an on-board app which looks like a daily planner. It
shows day view, week, month and year. It is easy to use and easy to apply. It
is easy to keep yourself organized. You can also use picture scheduler or Photomind where you can add pictures to
your calendar.
Wait Strip is a
reward app for completion of tasks or target behaviors. It is similar to a penny
chart. You can customize colours etc. When a task or behavior is complete you
tap the circle and when the last one is done you get video and audio feedback.
iReward Chart is
a good app for younger children with
ADHD or ASD for rewards. You can set it to be very specific and you can add
multiple children and include photos of children. You can choose pre-listed
rewards but you can add specific rewards. You can assign a certain number of
stars to get this reward. Student can set up the reward menu. You can check the
balance sheet to see how many were earned and what rewards were taken.
Develop social stories with videos that students can refer
to it on a mobile device. One example is Pictello.
You can import video and use text to speech. It can teach in role playing to
prepare students to respond or to hold back when needed. You can download
social stories from the internet and add in personalized pictures. It can be
read out loud to students when it is ready.
Social Skills Sampler
has free social stories that are in the form of a video modeling story. They
can be used as jump off points so you can talk further about related scenarios.
Book Creator and Ibook Creator also allow you to create your own stories and you can put
them on the book shelf for easy future access.
Shredder
(99cents) allows you to write a negative thought and shred it to represent
letting the thought go. It gets the thought out and gets a giggle and a
positive reaction.
Calm Counter has
a social story to start. It shows you how to deal with stress and calm down,
one step at a time. It counts back from 10 with a picture of a mad face getting
calmer as you count down. It would be a great tool to calm down a student who
was getting upset.
Inspiration App
is good for task initiation. It has templates and graphic organizers for many
tasks. It helps initiate an idea as the beginning part of the output.
It can be customized in a variety of ways. It is like a
living, flexible graphic organizer that is easy to use and produces a fun yet
professional looking product.
Worksystem is a
new, free app which is a text based visual schedule. It breaks down the day
into manageable chunks. You can make a visual schedule for any individual. This
app would be great for learning centre where you had to produce schedules or
task strips for students in many different settings.
Sock Puppets is
an app where you can pick characters and backgrounds. It allows students to
role play. Sock puppets mouths move as the person talks. You can save the shows
and students can work at improving on their flexibility and adaptability. It
would be motivating and fun but is a great way to program.
Games are good for social skills and turn taking. They teach
how to be a winner or loser and to wait for your turn. Four in a Row is one of
these games.
These are just a few of the thousands of apps available but
they are a good place to start when using mobile devices in schools.
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