working memory
Prioritising a child in the green zone for working memory
For a child in the green (strength) RAG zone for working memory, the therapist should not allocate primary intervention intensity there; instead document the strength, leverage it as a scaffold for amber/red goals, give the family a light maintenance strategy, and set a re-screen interval. Escalate only if function deteriorates or a green score sits incongruently against real-world complaints. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
A green-zone working memory is not a finish line — it is a strength to protect, leverage and monitor while you concentrate intensity where the profile needs it most.
In short
When a child sits in the green (typical/strength) RAG zone for working memory, the clinical priority is proportionate: do not allocate primary intervention intensity here. Instead, document the strength, deploy it as a scaffold for goals in amber/red domains, give the family a light maintenance strategy, and set a re-screen interval rather than active treatment targets. Green means "surveillance and leverage", not "discharge and ignore".Prioritising the green-zone child
- Triage by gradient, not by domain in isolation. Direct session time and goal-writing toward amber/red domains first; working-memory minutes are justified only where a co-occurring functional limitation (e.g. multi-step instruction follow-through, reading comprehension load) is the rate-limiter despite the green score.
- Leverage the strength. Use intact working memory as a compensatory channel — chunked verbal rehearsal, self-talk strategies, and front-loaded instruction — to accelerate progress in weaker domains. A green working memory is one of your most useful therapeutic levers.
- Maintenance, not remediation. Provide the family and educator with one or two embedded everyday strategies (working-memory-loaded play, recall games) to sustain the skill; avoid manufacturing deficit-style drills for a domain that is already typical.
- Set a review window. Re-screen at the next scheduled developmental review or sooner if function regresses, particularly through transitions (school entry, increased academic load) when working-memory demand rises sharply.
- Watch the discrepancy. A green standardised profile with persistent functional complaints (parent/teacher report of forgetting, losing track mid-task) warrants closer observation — the construct may be intact in testing but taxed in real-world dual-task conditions.
When to escalate
Reprioritise working memory upward only if function deteriorates, if a green score sits incongruently against strong real-world complaints, or if it becomes the limiting factor for an active goal. Otherwise, hold it in monitoring and reinvest capacity into the child's higher-need domains.The Pinnacle way
The RAG zone is one signal within a clinician-administered structured assessment — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care, never from a screen alone. Anchor your prioritisation in the full profile via the AbilityScore® assessment, align maintenance and leverage strategies through occupational therapy planning, and explore the wider network of developmental support at [Pinnacle Blooms Network](/).Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 neurodevelopmental framework; CDC developmental milestone and monitoring resources; American Academy of Pediatrics guidance on developmental surveillance and re-screening intervals.Next step — Review the child's complete domain profile and set evidence-led priorities with the AbilityScore® assessment.
This is general clinical information, not a diagnosis — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre under qualified clinician care.
What to watch
Watch for a green standardised score that sits incongruently against strong real-world complaints of forgetting or losing track mid-task, and for working-memory demand rising at transitions such as school entry.
Try this at home
Give the family one or two embedded recall games rather than deficit-style drills — a typical skill needs maintenance, not remediation.
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 I can discharge the working-memory goal?
Not quite — green means surveillance and leverage rather than active remediation. Hold the strength in monitoring, leverage it to support weaker domains, and set a re-screen window rather than formally discharging it.
Should I still write a working-memory goal for a green-zone child?
Only if a co-occurring functional limitation is the rate-limiter despite the green score. Otherwise, direct goal-writing and session intensity toward the amber and red domains first.
When would I reprioritise working memory upward?
If function deteriorates, if a green score sits incongruently against strong parent or teacher complaints, or if it becomes the limiting factor for an active goal — particularly through transitions like school entry.