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Problem-Solving

Prioritising a green-zone problem-solving result in therapy

A green-zone RAG result for problem solving signals the domain is tracking as expected, so it should be prioritised as monitor-and-enrich rather than actively treated: protect therapy minutes for amber/red domains, leverage the intact skill as a scaffold, watch for masking, and re-screen on a defined cadence. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.

Prioritising a green-zone problem-solving result in therapy
Green-zone problem solving: monitor, enrich, don't drill — Ask Pinnacle, the Child Development Kośa

When a child sits comfortably in the green zone for problem solving, the therapist's job shifts from remediation to protection, enrichment and surveillance.

In short

A green-zone (RAG) result for problem solving means the child's cognitive-adaptive skills are tracking as expected — so this domain is not the priority target for active intervention. Prioritise it as monitor-and-enrich, not treat: protect therapy time for amber/red domains, embed problem solving as a strength to leverage within those goals, and schedule routine re-screening so a quietly emerging plateau is caught early. The green status describes a screening band, not a diagnosis.

How to prioritise within the plan

  • De-prioritise for active dosing. Reserve direct, high-frequency therapy minutes for domains in amber or red. Spending scarce session time drilling an already age-appropriate skill carries an opportunity cost.
  • Leverage the strength. Use intact problem solving as a scaffold for weaker domains — e.g. route expressive-language or fine-motor targets through cause-effect play, sorting, sequencing and means-end tasks the child already enjoys and succeeds at. This raises engagement and transfer.
  • Set a maintenance bar, not a growth target. Frame the green-zone goal as sustaining the trajectory through enriched daily routines and parent-mediated play, rather than a discrete treatment objective.
  • Surveillance over intervention. Define a clear re-screen interval and the trigger signs that would move the domain to amber (loss of previously mastered skills, widening gap from peers, flagging on a comorbid domain). Document the rationale for not treating — green is an active clinical decision, not an omission.
  • Watch for masking. Strong problem solving can compensate for and conceal difficulty elsewhere (e.g. social-communication). Confirm the green band reflects genuine ability, not a child working around a hidden deficit.

When to escalate

Move problem solving back onto the active caseload if re-screening shows regression, if parent or teacher report diverges from the screen, or if it is the lone green domain propping up a generally delayed profile. In those cases, re-administer the structured assessment rather than relying on the prior band.

The Pinnacle way

The RAG band is a screening signal — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care, never from a band alone. Use the clinician-administered AbilityScore® profile to confirm the green status is robust, then channel the child's problem solving strength into prioritised goals — often via occupational therapy — and set your re-screen cadence. Explore the wider [developmental support pathway](/).

Trusted sources

WHO ICD-11 neurodevelopmental framework and developmental surveillance principles; CDC "Learn the Signs. Act Early." milestone monitoring; American Academy of Pediatrics developmental surveillance and screening guidance.

Next step — Confirm the green band and redirect therapy minutes where they count — review the child's AbilityScore® profile with a Pinnacle clinician.

What to watch

Watch for regression or loss of mastered skills, a widening gap from peers, parent/teacher report that diverges from the green screen, or strong problem solving masking difficulty in another domain.

Try this at home

Channel the child's intact problem-solving skill into play that targets weaker domains — sorting, sequencing and cause-effect games make language or fine-motor practice engaging and transferable.

Trusted sources

Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days

This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.

Frequently asked

Does a green zone mean problem solving needs no attention at all?

No. Green means it is tracking as expected and is not the active intervention target, but it still needs surveillance — schedule routine re-screening and watch for any drift toward amber, since green is a clinical decision to monitor, not to ignore.

Can a green-zone strength help the rest of the plan?

Yes. Intact problem solving is a valuable scaffold. Routing expressive-language or fine-motor goals through cause-effect, sorting and sequencing tasks the child already succeeds at boosts engagement and skill transfer to weaker domains.

When should problem solving move back onto the active caseload?

Re-prioritise it if re-screening shows regression, if parent or teacher report diverges from the screen, or if it is the only green domain masking difficulty elsewhere. In those cases re-administer the structured assessment rather than relying on the prior band.

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