Episode Details

Back to Episodes
375. Executive Functions for Every K–3 Classroom: Featuring Sarah Oberle & Mitch Weathers

375. Executive Functions for Every K–3 Classroom: Featuring Sarah Oberle & Mitch Weathers

Published 3 days, 17 hours ago
Description
What if the reason so many young students struggle in the classroom has nothing to do with behavior, laziness, or defiance, and everything to do with emerging executive functions that have simply not been taught yet? In this episode of Aspire to Lead, Joshua Stamper welcomes back two familiar faces, executive functioning expert Mitch Weathers and primary educator and researcher Sarah Oberle, to celebrate the release of their brand new co-authored book Executive Functions for Every K–3 Classroom: Promoting Self-Regulation for a Strong Start. Mitch and Sarah share the story behind the book, including how Sarah tracked Mitch down through a contact form after realizing his first book, which covered grades three through twelve, left primary teachers without the tools they desperately needed for the youngest learners in the building. Together they explain why working memory, inhibition, and cognitive flexibility look completely different in a five, six, or seven year old, and why what looks like defiance or inattention in a primary classroom is almost always a child whose executive functions are still in the very early stages of development. The conversation is packed with practical, immediately usable strategies embedded in routines teachers are already using, from how to orient student attention before instruction, to rethinking classroom displays that quietly drain cognitive bandwidth, to the power of being so granular and specific in directions that ambiguity is removed entirely. Mitch and Sarah also speak directly to school leaders about what to look for when walking into classrooms where this work is taking root, and why investing in executive function development at the primary level is the most powerful tier one intervention a school can make. About Mitch Weathers: Mitch Weathers became an exceptional educator because he once struggled as a student. Throughout his academic journey, Mitch rarely felt comfortable in the classroom. It took him seven years to graduate from college—a reflection not of ability, but of disconnection. He often experienced education as something happening around him, not something he was actively part of. That sense of isolation fueled his desire to create a different kind of learning experience. When Mitch became a teacher, he brought with him a deep empathy for students who felt unseen or overwhelmed. He quickly realized that before we can effectively teach content, we must first build the foundation for learning. That foundation is structure, consistency, and support. To meet this need, Mitch created Organized Binder—a simple, research-backed system that empowers teachers to explicitly teach executive functioning skills without sacrificing instructional time. By establishing predictable learning routines, teachers foster safer, more inclusive classrooms where students gain confidence, independence, and a sense of belonging. Mitch’s mission is to equip educators with the tools to help every student succeed—not just academically, but personally. Follow Mitch Weathers:
Listen Now