Summer Programs

Academic and Writing Strategies (Grades 4-8)

Evidence-based research shows that struggling writers can improve their skills dramatically if they receive the detailed explicit instruction they need (Graham & Harris, 2005).

Such strategies can improve the writing skills of students with learning disabilities and are equally effective for individuals who just need extra help.

Evoke’s Academic and Writing Strategies program teaches students, step-by-step, a variety of evidence-based strategies that help them manage the writing process and improve what they write. The program assists students with every phase of the writing process, from brainstorming, goal setting, and writing an effective sentence and paragraph, to proofreading and revisionstrategies that have been researched and proven to work with students at all levels, especially those who are challenged by learning disabilities. Together, student and academic strategist will identify the greatest roadblocks to the student’s writing and choose the strategies that will best address their challenges.

The writing process demands a lot from our brains, requiring us to perform multiple tasks simultaneously.

Many students with executive function challenges, ADHD, and learning disabilities have a difficult time organizing their writing. Learning to write is a process that necessitates the development of several skills including working memory, grapho-motor skills, attention, orthographic knowledge, executive function skills, processing speed, visual-spatial abilities, language and reading skills, problem-solving and thinking skills, and metacognition. These are areas where neurodiverse learners often have deficits.

At Evoke, students work one-to-one with an academic strategist and are provided with the explicit strategy instruction required to enhance their writing skills and boost their confidence.

Study, note-taking, and learning skills, in addition to the use of assistive technology for writing, may also be woven into the curriculum for students requiring this support. This program requires a minimum commitment of 15 hours over the course of the summer and 15 minutes of homework per day, in between sessions, to reinforce strategies and skills. Sessions are 45 minutes.

Minimum Expected
Summer Commitment

15 Coaching
Hours

The Role of the Academic Strategist

Our academic strategists are allies who partner with students to teach research-informed approaches grounded in science to overcome executive function barriers.

The role of the academic strategist is multifaceted. Academic strategists support students using a holistic approach to help strengthen their self-regulation and executive functioning skills and improve their academic performance. There is no one-size-fits-all approach. Individuals require different strategies and learners have a variety of needs. Academic strategists share options for increasing efficacy and create personalized learning plans for students that will help them identify and understand their strengths and challenges, assist them in developing specific learning strategies to meet the demands of academic life, and support their executive function challenges. Students receive support with goal setting, time management, understanding and getting started on assignments, advocating for accommodations, the use of assistive technology to lighten cognitive load, reading and annotating effectively, studying for tests and exams, and developing writing strategies.

Our Academic and Writing Strategy Sessions Focus on:

Co-creating personalized action plans for student success, analyzing progress, and developing strategies to optimize performance

The cognitive science behind how the brain learns (how to work smarter, not harder) and misunderstandings about learning

Reducing cognitive load to increase motivation and academic outcomes

Deepening the student’s understanding of, and the ability to use, assistive technology (if needed)

Assisting students with advocating for and accessing accommodations and support (if applicable)

Teaching executive function strategies that enhance organization, planning, initiation, effective routines, and structure

Teaching academic (learning) skills, including how to study, high-level reading strategies, and note-taking strategies

Teaching writing strategies and pairing those with the use of assistive technology, as necessary