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Promoting Regulation and Flexibility in Thinking

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This concise guide introduces the importance of executive function for social and emotional well-being, and effective learning. It clearly explains the research that underpins important topics such as working memory, organization, self-regulation, attention and cognitive flexibility, and how they apply to the real-world settings in which we work with children, adolescents, and families. This engaging book offers knowledge and strategies for improving executive function together with an understanding of its relevance for diverse populations.
The authors use the most current research to provide an overview of what executive function is, how it develops, and how it works in coordination with other developmental factors to promote regulation and flexibility in thinking. Chapters contain detailed information about the biological and physiological foundations for brain development and emotion regulation, as well as advances in cognition, emotion, and social relationships. Making the research accessible to all with evidence-based writing and theory-to-practice applications, the book provides applications with career contexts and interviews and case studies that bring the book to life.
Designed to introduce professionals, advocates, and parents to the importance of executive function in human development, this book is for all those working with children and young people. It will also be of interest as an introductory text for those new to the field or as a way to learn to apply developmental principles in practice.

240 pages, Paperback

Published March 29, 2024

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About the author

Kristen Alexander

44 books12 followers
Kristen Alexander was born and grew up in Orange, New South Wales, Australia. After time spent in Armidale and Sydney she moved to Canberra in the Australian Capital Territory in 1993 with her soon-to-become husband, David.

Kristen is a former public servant (human resource management, administrative law/freedom of information and project work). She left the service in 1996 and in 1997 she and David purchased a small suburban post office in Canberra which soon became Hughes Post Office and Secondhand Books.

In 2004, Kristen and David opened Alexander Fax Booksellers, specialising in quality Australian second hand and selected new military books. She rarely sets foot in the shop, leaving that to David, but manages the inventory and produces regular mail order catalogues.

Kristen has been a member of the Military Historical Society of Australia since 2001 and was Federal Secretary from 2003–2011. She was UK-based Battle of Britain Historical Society's Australian Representative in 2011. She is an associate member of the Spitfire Association and a member of the Aviation Historical Society of Australia.

Kristen has been researching and writing about Australian pilots of the Second World War since 2002, when Alexander Fax Booksellers purchased letters written by Clive Caldwell written shortly after his first aerial victories. She read the letters, thought there might be a book there and hasn’t stopped writing since.

Allen & Unwin published Clive Caldwell Air Ace in 2006 and Jack Davenport Beaufighter Leader in 2009. Tsukumo published the Japanese edition of Clive Caldwell Air Ace in 2011. Barrallier Books published Australian Eagles, a collection of her biographical articles about six Australian Battle of Britain pilots, in July 2013.

Jack Davenport Beaufighter Leader was included in the RAAF Chief of Air Force’s 2010 Reading List.

Her essay entitled ‘Australian Knights of the Air and their Little Touches of Chivalry’ won the Military Historical Society of Australia’s 2012 Sabretache Writers’ Prize. It was published in the December 2012 issue of Sabretache, the Journal of the Military Historical Society of Australia.

Her essay entitled ‘Miss Celia Macdonald of the Isles "who has been a particularly good friend"’ won the Military Historical Society of Australia’s 2013 Sabretache Writers’ Prize. It was published in the September 2013 issue of Sabretache, the Journal of the Military Historical Society of Australia.

Her articles and book reviews have appeared in Sabretache, Aviation Heritage, the Journal of the Aviation Historical Society of Australia, Wings, Official Publication of the RAAFA, Britain at War and Flightpath.

In November 2012, the National Library of Australia commissioned Kristen to write an account of the 1930s record-making pilot Lores Bonney, based on items held in the Library’s collection, as part of the Collection Highlights series.This will be published in 2016.

NewSouth Publishing, a division of the University of NSW Press, published Australia’s Few and the Battle of Britain in September 2014.

As well as writing books, her greatest intellectual challenges are the Canberra Times’s quick crossword and thinking of novel ways to convince David that he should do the cooking. She takes little time off from her writing projects but when she does, she loves reading, watching old films, especially Cary Grant, Doris Day, Grace Kelly and Jimmy Stewart and of course the old musicals. She listens to 1940s swing and has a sweet tooth. She adores tea of most persuasions and passionately believes a good cuppa, served in fine china (of which she has a very good collection) will cure all ills. Her favourite meal, if you can call it that, is scones, jam and Darjeeling. Above all, she is potty about cats. She has been privileged to share her heart and home with many little friends over the years and her current BFF (besides David) is Millie, a lively green-eyed tabby.

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Displaying 1 of 1 review
27 reviews4 followers
May 8, 2024
This is a good overview of executive functions for students and professionals. The last two chapters were excellent -- full of valuable insight.
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