Award-Winning Executive Functioning Tutors
serving Staten Island, NY
Award-Winning
Executive Functioning
Tutors in Staten Island
Private 1-on-1 tutoring, weekly live classes for academic support, test prep & enrichment, practice tests and diagnostics, and more to elevate grades and test scores.
Based on 3.4M Learner Ratings
UniversitiesSchools & Universities
DeliveredHours Delivered
ProficiencyGrowth in Proficiency
Who needs tutoring?
No obligation. Takes ~1 minute.

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 — so students build routines that work independently of a tutor's reminders.

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 tailors each system to how a student's brain already works rather than forcing a one-size-fits-all planner approach.
Planning, time management, task initiation, emotional regulation — executive functioning deficits show up differently in every student, and Mati's doctoral training in learning disabilities means she can pinpoint which skills are lagging and why. She builds individualized systems like visual schedules, chunked assignments, and self-monitoring checklists that students actually use because they're designed around how each person's brain works, not a generic planner template.
Five years working specifically with students with learning differences taught Sydney where the real sticking points are — the student who knows what the assignment says but can't figure out where to start, or the one who chronically underestimates how long a reading response will take. She ties executive functioning strategies like task breakdown and self-monitoring directly to the English and Spanish coursework she also tutors, so students practice these skills on actual assignments rather than in isolation. Rated 4.9 by clients.
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-level work means she calibrates these systems to each student's actual academic demands, building routines around real homework and deadlines rather than abstract exercises. Rated 5.0 by clients.
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 that deadlines stop feeling like emergencies. Rated 4.8 by students and families.
Planning, prioritizing, managing time, shifting between tasks — these are the invisible skills that school demands but rarely teaches outright. Elise breaks executive functioning into concrete, practicable habits: using checklists to start assignments, setting timers to maintain focus, and building routines for organizing materials. Her special education training means she understands the neurological side of these challenges, not just the behavioral one.
Planning a multi-step assignment, managing time across subjects, keeping materials organized — these are skills most schools expect but rarely teach explicitly. Charles's counseling psychology training gives him concrete strategies for building these executive functioning habits, from using visual task breakdowns to teaching students how to self-monitor their own focus and prioritize effectively.
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 schoolwork so students practice organization and task initiation where it actually matters, not in isolation.
I hold a Master's degree from the University of Pennsylvania in developmental psychology (with a focus on cognition) and a B.A. from Swarthmore College in theatre and English. I enjoy working with students who are looking to improve their executive function skills as a part of their overall goals for tutoring because I believe in a whole-self approach to time management and skill building. I also thoroughly enjoy tutoring in English literature, high school and college writing, organizational skills, and standardized testing. I've spent 15 years teaching high school English, public speaking, and written expression at elite independent schools, while moonlighting as a public speaking coach. My professional experience includes providing speechwriting and coaching for a now-US Senator during his first congressional campaign. Prior to becoming a teacher, I worked as a director for multiple professional theaters, and my passions for English and Theatre converge in a deep love of Shakespeare. I love to talk about literature and dissect its craft in writing, and I believe everyone can write strong essays with the right coaching and framework.
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 strategies — like breaking a writing assignment into discrete stages or building a nightly homework launch routine — directly into the English and literacy work she already does with students. That integrated approach means kids practice planning and self-monitoring on real schoolwork, not hypothetical scenarios.
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 functioning strategies like sequencing and self-monitoring directly to the academic work students bring in, whether that's structuring a college essay or mapping out a study plan for chemistry.
Testimonials
Because the right Executive Functioning tutor makes all the difference.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Executive functioning refers to the mental processes that help us plan, organize, manage time, and complete tasks—skills essential for academic success and daily life. Students with strong executive functioning can break down assignments into steps, stay focused, manage deadlines, and adapt when plans change. For students in Staten Island, developing these skills early makes a significant difference in school performance, particularly as coursework becomes more complex in middle and high school.
Many students struggle with time management, difficulty starting tasks, disorganization, trouble prioritizing assignments, and challenges with working memory. Others find it hard to break large projects into manageable steps or to shift focus between different types of work. These challenges often become more noticeable when students transition to new grade levels or face increased academic demands, and they can affect performance across all subjects regardless of a student's actual knowledge or ability.
In a typical classroom setting with a 12.2:1 student-teacher ratio across Staten Island, teachers focus on delivering content to the whole class rather than coaching individual students on organizational strategies. Personalized instruction allows tutors to assess a student's specific challenges—whether it's planning, impulse control, or follow-through—and teach targeted strategies tailored to how that student learns best. This one-on-one approach also creates space for practice and feedback in real time, helping skills stick faster.
The first session is typically an assessment and conversation. A tutor will learn about the student's current challenges, ask about their daily routines, review how they approach schoolwork, and understand what matters most to them and their family. From there, the tutor develops a personalized plan focusing on the executive functioning skills that will have the biggest impact—whether that's organization, time management, task initiation, or something else entirely.
Progress shows up in concrete ways: assignments turned in on time, cleaner notes and organized materials, less last-minute cramming, improved grades, and reduced stress around schoolwork. Many students also report feeling more confident and less overwhelmed. Most families notice meaningful changes within 4-6 weeks of consistent work, though the timeline depends on the student's starting point and how frequently they practice new strategies.
Executive functioning skills develop throughout childhood and into the teenage years, so students at any grade level can benefit from support. However, critical transition points—like moving from elementary to middle school or middle to high school—are especially important times to strengthen these skills. Even younger students can learn basic organizational and planning strategies, while older students often benefit from more advanced techniques for managing complex, long-term projects and multiple classes.
Absolutely. The strategies students learn—planning, organizing, managing time, staying focused—apply to homework, sports, chores, hobbies, and social activities. A student who learns to break down a big project into steps can use that same skill to organize their room, prepare for a presentation, or manage their gaming time. These are life skills that benefit students well beyond the classroom.
Varsity Tutors matches you with expert tutors who specialize in executive functioning and understand how to teach organizational and planning strategies to students at your child's level. After you share information about your student's specific challenges and goals, you'll be connected with a tutor experienced in that area. The process is straightforward, and you can start working together quickly to build skills that make a real difference.
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