
Being a successful high school student today is not merely about intelligence or motivation. Between challenging classes, homework, extracurriculars, standardized test prep, social lives, and family responsibilities, students are juggling more than ever.
In my experience, the students who thrive aren’t necessarily the ones who work the longest hours; they’re the ones who stay organized, manage their time intentionally, and maintain balance.
That’s where executive functioning comes in. Executive functioning is a set of skills that helps you plan ahead, stay focused, manage information, and follow through on tasks. The good news? These skills aren’t innate talents—you can learn and practice them.
This guide is designed to be exactly that: a practical, realistic, and student-friendly roadmap to staying organized and productive without burning out. By the end, you should feel confident about your executive functioning skills so that you can stay on top of your responsibilities while still making time for the things you enjoy.
We’ll focus on four pillars:
- Maintaining a calendar that actually works
- Studying effectively (not endlessly)
- Managing communication across platforms
- Staying balanced and avoiding burnout
It took me a years-long journey to figure out these skills and even more years to master them. I’m hoping that by the end of this article (about 15 minutes of reading) you’ll instantly become equipped with the foundation that took me so long to build for myself.
Executive Functioning Part 1: How to Maintain a Calendar (Without Hating It)

A calendar is the foundation of organization. If you don’t know what you need to do or when you need to do it, everything else becomes harder. That’s why using a digital calendar, like Google Calendar, Apple Calendar, or another scheduling app, is essential.
I go more into detail about maintaining a productive and fun schedule in this blog.
Why digital calendars beat paper planners
Paper planners can work, but digital calendars have a few major advantages:
- They send reminders and notifications
- They’re always with you on your phone
- You can easily move, edit, and repeat events
- You can color-code different types of commitments
Your calendar should include everything:
- Classes and school schedule
- Tutoring or test prep sessions
- Homework deadlines and exam dates
- Extracurricular activities, practices, and meetings
- Family commitments
- Social plans and downtime
If it matters to your time, it belongs on your calendar.
The secret trick: schedule fun first
Here’s a counterintuitive but incredibly effective strategy: put all the fun events in your calendar first.
Again, I go more into detail about this concept in this blog, but the bullet points below will give you the gist.
That means:
- Parties and social gatherings
- Games, concerts, or performances
- Birthdays
- Trips and vacations
Why does this work?
Because when students only schedule work, their calendar becomes something to dread. It feels like a long list of obligations with no reward. When you schedule fun first, two powerful things happen:
- You protect your downtime. You’re less likely to overbook yourself or agree to extra commitments that lead to stress.
- You’re motivated to work efficiently. When you know there’s something fun coming up, you’re more likely to focus and get your work done.
Productivity isn’t about eliminating fun; it’s about making room for it.
Use time blocks, not vague plans
Instead of writing “study” on your calendar, be specific:
- “Math homework: 4:00–4:45 PM”
- “SAT Reading practice: 6:00–6:30 PM”
Clear time blocks make tasks feel manageable and reduce procrastination. They also help you see when your day is actually full and when it isn’t.
Finally, check your calendar at least twice a day: once in the morning and once in the evening. That small habit alone can dramatically reduce missed deadlines and last-minute stress.
Executive Functioning Part 2: How to Study Most Effectively
Many students believe that studying longer automatically means studying better. In reality, how you study matters far more than how long you study.
Two hours of focused, intentional studying will always beat eight hours of distracted, half-hearted work.
(By the way, I also wrote a blog on studying effectively! You can find it, and all of its nuanced details, right here).
Minimize distractions aggressively
Effective studying starts with controlling your environment. That means:
- Put your phone in another room or use app blockers
- Close unnecessary tabs on your laptop
- Choose a quiet, consistent study location
Multitasking feels productive, but it’s one of the biggest enemies of learning. Every notification pulls your brain out of focus, making it harder to retain information.
Study in short, focused sessions
Your brain works best in sprints, not marathons. Aim for:
- 25–45 minutes of focused work
- Followed by a 5–10 minute break
During breaks, step away from your screen. Stretch, walk around, grab water, or take a few deep breaths. These breaks help prevent burnout and improve retention.
Quality over quantity
Effective studying is active, not passive. That means:
- Doing practice problems instead of rereading notes
- Quizzing yourself instead of highlighting
- Explaining concepts out loud as if you’re teaching someone else
The key takeaway is simple: studying should feel challenging but purposeful. If it feels endless and draining, something needs to change.
Executive Functioning Part 3: How to Effectively Manage Communications

Modern students don’t just have one inbox—they have many.
Email. Texts. Class websites. Learning platforms like Canvas or Blackboard. Messaging apps. Zoom links. In-person conversations.
Without a system, important information quickly gets lost.
Step one: clear the clutter
Start by cleaning up your communication channels:
- Unsubscribe from spam emails
- Delete old message threads that are no longer relevant
- Archive emails you don’t need daily access to
Your inbox doesn’t need to be empty, but it should be usable.
The “read, save, or delete” rule
This rule goes by many names, depending on whom you’re speaking with. However, I just call it the “Read, Save, Delete” rule. Whenever a notification pops up, don’t ignore it indefinitely. Instead, choose one of three actions:
- Read it and act on it immediately if it’s quick
- Save it (or mark it unread/starred) if you’ll need it later
- Delete it if it’s irrelevant
Letting messages pile up creates mental clutter and anxiety. A decision, even a small one, keeps you in control.
Segregate communication by purpose
Different platforms are best suited for different types of communication:
- Email: teachers, counselors, tutors, official school messages
- Texts: friends, family, quick coordination
- Class websites/LMS: assignments, grades, exams, announcements
- Calendars: deadlines, meetings, events
Avoid mixing these whenever possible. For example, don’t rely on texts to remember homework deadlines—those belong on your class website and calendar.
Finally, check each platform at intentional times instead of constantly throughout the day. This prevents distraction while ensuring nothing important slips through the cracks.
Part 4: Staying Balanced (and Why It Matters More Than You Think)
One of the most common misconceptions among high-achieving students is the idea that success requires constant grinding.
It doesn’t.
In fact, that mindset often backfires.
This lesson is the one that took me the longest time to learn.
The myth of nonstop productivity
Working all the time leads to:
- Burnout
- Increased stress
- Lower focus
- Worse test performance
Your brain is not a machine. It needs rest to function well.
Balance improves performance
Students who make time for rest, hobbies, and social connection often:
- Learn more efficiently
- Retain information longer
- Perform better under pressure
- Feel more confident going into exams
If you walk into a test calm and in a good mood, you’re far more likely to perform at your best than if you’re exhausted and overwhelmed.
Balance is intentional, not accidental
Balance doesn’t just happen. You have to plan it.
That’s why scheduling fun events in your calendar is so powerful. It’s also why protecting sleep, exercise, and downtime isn’t lazy—it’s strategic.
Success isn’t about doing everything. It’s about doing the right things consistently, while taking care of yourself along the way.
Final Thoughts on Executive Functioning: Organization Is a Skill You Can Learn
Executive functioning isn’t about being perfect or hyper-disciplined. It’s about building systems that support you.
When you:
- Use a calendar intentionally
- Study efficiently instead of endlessly
- Manage communication thoughtfully
- Protect your balance and well-being
—you set yourself up not just for better grades and test scores, but for a healthier, more sustainable version of success.
The goal isn’t to become someone who’s always working. The goal is to become someone who knows when to work, how to work, and when to rest.
That’s a skill that will serve you far beyond high school, and it’s one you can start mastering today.
If you’re interested in working one-on-one with a tutor to build your executive functioning skills and work towards a balanced life, schedule a free consultation with us today.


