Study Skills & Executive Function Curriculum for Educators | SOAR

Brain First Learning in an AI World

Start here: For educators · Grades 6–12

The skills that matter most?
The System does not teach.

School expects students to manage themselves, organize their work, and learn on their own. SOAR is the curriculum that actually teaches them how — in a brain-friendly, friction-free way.

Classroom-tested in 5,100 schools across 53 countries.

The invisible foundation Four solid school subjects — math, science, English, and history — sit in a row, each resting on the same ghosted, unnamed foundation layer beneath them: the executive function skills that hold every subject up. WHAT SCHOOL TEACHES Math Science English History WHAT THE SYSTEM MISSES The skills that hold all of it up (executive function skills) Every subject rests on this one layer — the part The System does not teach.

By middle and high school, students are expected to be independent and organized — to keep track of their work, manage their time, read closely, and learn without someone walking them through every step.

But The System doesn’t teach them how — and very few pick it up on their own. Some get sophisticated at winging it. Some hobble along. And for many, the wheels come off and the effort drops; from the front of the room, it reads as apathy.

And here’s what’s new. In an AI world, this stops being only the strugglers’ problem. The students who look most successful — the ones who’ve gotten by on raw ability, winging it brilliantly — are often the most exposed, because no one ever built the capacity underneath. When the tool that does the thinking is one tap away — every student reaches for it, unless someone teaches them to think for themselves first.

It’s the most pervasive problem in education, and the hardest to see — because it’s an assumption, not a subject. Nobody schedules a class for it.

SOAR makes the invisible, visible.

We give these hidden skills a name, a structure, and a sequence — so students can finally see what learning actually requires, and do it on purpose.

SOAR is a curriculum for grades 6–12 that teaches the assumed-but-never-taught skills underneath every subject — and it teaches them the way the brain actually builds them, not as habits to drill:

  • Organize work, materials, and digital files
  • Manage time and plan ahead
  • Read nonfiction for meaning
  • Take usable notes
  • Study effectively
  • Think and learn independently

These are the human capacities that become more important in an AI world, not less.

The name for all of itThese skills are executive function. It’s the most talked-about gap in education — and the least understood. It’s also the thread that runs through everything below. Most programs that promise to build executive function treat it as a set of habits to drill, not skills the brain must be taught to do. SOAR is built the other way around: it maps how the brain learns, then explicitly teaches executive function skills aligned to that pattern. It serves grades 6–12.

So where does a class like this even fit?

It’s the first question every administrator asks — and the answer is the part most don’t expect. SOAR doesn’t ask for a new slot in the schedule. It fits the ones you already have.

The two-birds move

SOAR can count as your ELA credit — not in addition to it.

The skills SOAR teaches are your ELA standards. SOAR doesn’t replace ELA. It unlocks ELA. So it can fill a slot you already have — a year-long ELA course, or a first-year / freshman orientation course that meets ELA standards — while building the focus, independence, and thinking skills that carry into every other class.

See how SOAR counts as an ELA credit →
And it fits a second door just as cleanly: intervention. SOAR drops straight into RTI — Tier I instruction (possibly as ELA credit), Tier II interventions, or Tier III support — no electives sacrificed, no schedule rebuilt. That’s a doorway of its own, with the demand to match. Start with the RTI hub →

And students actually engage.

Most teaching starts at the top — throw the content at students and hope it sticks. But learning can’t stand alone. It rests on two layers underneath, and when those are missing, the content slides off.

The Learning Success Pyramid is the model SOAR is built on. It builds confidence first, then executive function, and only then optimizes learning itself. That order is why students engage instead of resist — and why the skills transfer to every subject.

In practice, that means a student plans an assignment, reads for meaning, takes notes, and studies for a test using the same repeatable steps — in science, in history, in English. One structure, every class.

The Learning Success Pyramid: a three-tier model built bottom-up — motivation and confidence at the base (1), executive function and self-management in the middle (2), and learning at the top (3).
Where most teaching starts. Content gets thrown from top-down (3) — with nothing built underneath to hold it. The two layers schools skip. Without 1 and 2 in place, learning has nowhere to land.

One curriculum. Start with the door that fits your focus…

SOAR is a curriculum for grades 6–12 — flexible enough to meet the challenge that’s most pressing in your world. Each page is a short read that shows how SOAR fits. They’re different doors into the same work.

5,100 schools using SOAR
53 countries
+1.0 GPA lift, school-wide

The +1.0 GPA lift comes from a school’s own measured data following a school-wide SOAR implementation, shared with us.

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