Award-Winning Executive Functioning Tutors
serving Chicago, IL
Who needs tutoring?
FEATURED BY
TUTORS FROM
- YaleUniversity
- PrincetonUniversity
- StanfordUniversity
- CornellUniversity
Award-Winning Executive Functioning Tutors serving Chicago, IL

Certified Tutor
5+ years
Jennifer
Jennifer's M.Ed. in Curriculum and Instruction trained her to design structured learning sequences — a skill she now applies to teaching students how to plan multi-step projects, estimate time for assignments, and organize materials across classes. Her experience spanning elementary through college-...
Boston College
Masters in Education, Curriculum and Instruction
Dartmouth College
B.A. in History
Duke University
Juris Doctor, Prelaw Studies

Certified Tutor
4+ years
Candice
Candice's Fulbright teaching experience in Taiwan and her years as a classroom aide and afterschool mentor gave her constant practice recognizing when a student's real obstacle isn't the content but the inability to start, sequence, or sustain a task independently. She weaves executive functioning s...
The New School University
Master of Fine Arts, Creative Writing
University of Chicago
Bachelor in Arts, English

Certified Tutor
4+ years
Planning, prioritizing, and managing time across multiple commitments is something Sydny had to master while juggling three undergraduate majors and medical school preparation. She breaks executive functioning into specific, practicable skills — task initiation, deadline mapping, and self-monitoring...
Duke University
Bachelor of Science
Medical University of South Carolina
Doctor of Medicine, Premedicine

Certified Tutor
6+ years
Heather
Planning a multi-step assignment, managing time across subjects, breaking a big project into smaller pieces — these are skills that don't come naturally to every student. Heather's clinical psychology training gives her a framework for teaching organizational strategies that actually stick, and she ...
Cornell University
Bachelor in Arts, Psychology

Certified Tutor
Planning a multi-step project or breaking a semester's worth of material into a weekly study schedule requires the same structured thinking Andrew used throughout his engineering and MBA programs. He teaches students concrete systems for prioritizing tasks, managing time, and organizing materials so...
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
MBA in Finance
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Bachelor's in Engineering

Certified Tutor
5+ years
Jamie
Jamie's Master's in Special Education gave her direct training in breaking executive functioning into teachable skills — things like planning multi-step assignments, managing time with visual schedules, and self-monitoring progress without constant prompting. She builds these strategies into real sc...
CUNY Hunter College
Masters in Education, Special Education
Harvard University
Bachelor in Arts

Certified Tutor
13+ years
Kenneth
Kenneth's cognitive neuroscience degree means he understands the brain science behind why some students struggle to initiate tasks, regulate attention, or hold a plan in working memory — and that understanding shapes how he teaches these skills rather than just assigning them. He connects executive ...
University of Pennsylvania
Bachelor in Arts, Cognitive Neuroscience

Certified Tutor
8+ years
Kaitlyn
Medical school demands serious executive functioning — juggling anatomy, biochemistry, and clinical rotations means Kaitlyn has battle-tested systems for time management, task prioritization, and breaking large projects into manageable steps. She teaches students how to build their own planning rout...
Fairfield University
Bachelor of Science, Biology, General

Certified Tutor
Luis
Breaking a semester's worth of assignments into weekly action plans, prioritizing tasks by deadline weight, and building consistent study routines — these are the executive functioning skills Luis teaches through hands-on practice rather than abstract advice. His experience mentoring students across...
DePaul University
Master of Science, Physical Chemistry
Northwestern University
Masters in Business Administration, Business Administration and Management
University of Puerto Rico Mayaguez
Bachelor of Science, Chemistry

Certified Tutor
14+ years
Yilin
Law school is essentially a crash course in executive functioning — Yilin's Juris Doctor required managing simultaneous case briefs, seminar deadlines, and long-term research projects with zero hand-holding. She applies that same structured thinking to teach students how to prioritize competing assi...
Case Western Reserve University
Bachelor in Arts, Pyschology, Chemistry
Emory University
Juris Doctor, Law
Other Chicago Tutors
Frequently Asked Questions
Executive functioning develops progressively from kindergarten through high school. In elementary school, students are expected to follow multi-step directions, organize materials, and begin planning simple tasks. By middle school, expectations shift to managing longer-term projects, organizing notes across multiple subjects, and balancing competing deadlines. High school students are expected to independently manage complex assignments, prioritize effectively across several classes, and develop study systems that work for them. With Chicago's 17.7:1 student-teacher ratio across the district, many students benefit from personalized instruction that reinforces these grade-level skills in ways tailored to their learning style.
Executive functioning and intelligence are completely separate skills. A student can be intellectually gifted but struggle with organization, time management, or impulse control—or vice versa. Executive functioning refers to the mental processes that help you plan, organize, manage time, regulate emotions, and shift between tasks. These are learnable skills that improve with practice and support. Many students for Chicago benefit from personalized instruction focused specifically on building executive functioning habits, because classroom instruction often assumes these skills are already in place rather than teaching them directly.
Common challenges include losing track of assignments, difficulty starting or completing tasks, trouble organizing materials and backpacks, procrastination, managing multiple deadlines, transitioning between activities, and emotional regulation when frustrated. For students in Chicago, these challenges are often compounded by the demands of balancing schoolwork, extracurriculars, and social pressures. Personalized 1-on-1 instruction can identify which specific skills are causing difficulty—whether it's planning, organization, time management, or task initiation—and build targeted strategies that actually work for that individual student's brain and lifestyle.
Expert tutors help students develop executive functioning through direct coaching, practice, and habit-building rather than just explaining concepts. This includes teaching concrete strategies like breaking large projects into smaller steps, creating visual schedules, using checklists, and developing routines. Tutors work alongside students on actual schoolwork, helping them apply these strategies in real time and troubleshoot what isn't working. For students in Chicago, this personalized approach means strategies are tailored to your student's specific subjects, teachers, and goals—not generic tips that might not stick.
Yes. Executive functioning strategies are particularly valuable for students with ADHD, learning disabilities, or anxiety, as these conditions often affect executive function. However, executive functioning support benefits any student who struggles with organization, time management, or task initiation—regardless of whether there's a diagnosis. Tutors experienced in executive functioning can work effectively with students who have been evaluated or diagnosed, or with students who simply need stronger organizational and planning skills. The strategies are customized to work with your student's specific challenges and strengths.
Results are typically visible within 4-8 weeks when strategies are practiced consistently. Students often show improvements in completing homework on time, organizing materials and assignments, reducing stress around deadlines, and increased independence in managing schoolwork. Many students also report better grades once they have systems in place, since they're no longer losing assignments or forgetting to study. The goal is to build lasting habits and skills that transfer across all classes and activities—not just get through one assignment.
Varsity Tutors connects you with tutors who specialize in executive functioning and understand the specific challenges your student faces. When you describe your student's situation—whether it's trouble with organization, procrastination, transitioning between tasks, or managing multiple deadlines—Varsity Tutors matches you with a tutor experienced in that area. You can discuss learning style, any diagnoses or evaluations, and specific goals to ensure the fit is right. Many tutors offer an initial consultation to talk through your student's needs before committing to tutoring.
Connect with Executive Functioning Tutors in Chicago
Get matched with local expert tutors