The Developmental Hierarchy of School Readiness

New Zealand · CPD points & talks · Psychologists

New Zealand psychologists can deepen their understanding of school readiness with Maude Le Roux's talk. 'The Developmental Hierarchy of School Readiness' explores the neurodevelopmental building blocks and executive functioning crucial for academic success. Learn to identify how foundational gaps impact learning and behaviour in NZ students, empowering you to refine assessment and intervention approaches.

School readiness is more than age or academic exposure, it reflects a complex interplay of neurodevelopmental maturity and foundational skill acquisition. In this insightful talk, Occupational Therapist Maude Le Roux explores the developmental milestones that underpin a child’s ability to succeed in the classroom environment.

Drawing on the work of Posner (on attentional development) and Baddeley (on working memory), this talk outlines the stepwise hierarchy of cognitive and sensory integration required to build executive functioning. The talk helps participants recognise how gaps in early development can impact attention, learning, and behaviour - often forcing students into compensatory strategies that diminish cognitive resources.

This presentation is ideal for psychologists, school-based clinicians, and allied health professionals seeking a clearer framework for assessing school readiness and understanding the neurodevelopmental building blocks that precede formal learning.

YouTube links

Learning Outcomes

By the end of this talk, participants will be able to:

Anxiety & Depression in the Neurodivergent Community
Remediation & Accommodation for Executive Function Difficulties
Executive Functions: How do they develop and what do we do about it?
Body Dysmorphic Disorder: Diagnosis, formulation & treatment
Rethinking Couples Therapy: Imago Therapy as a Relational Paradigm
Beyond Narcissism: A handbook for practitioners and clients dealing with narcissistic abuse
Five Pathways to Parental Estrangement: Understanding How Estrangement Emerges, and Where Intervention Is Still Possible
Play therapy: anger, aggression and boundary setting
Also available for: South Africa · Australia · United Kingdom · United States · Canada