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Associate Professor Sally Staton
Associate Professor

Sally Staton

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Overview

Background

Dr Sally Staton is a Senior Research Fellow in the Science of Learning Research Centre at the Queensland Brain Institute, UQ. Dr Staton has a strong commitment to research that can inform and ensure positive early life experience for all children. Her research focuses on the role of early education and care settings in supporting young children’s immediate and on-going social-emotional, cognitive and physical development. Dr Staton’s research spans a range of study designs and methodologies, including evaluation studies in educational settings (applying randomised control trial and quasi-experimental designs), longitudinal studies tracking large child cohorts (>2000 children), standard observation techniques (in vivo and video), survey and individualised standard child assessment (using educational and psychological measures), as well as studies employing physiological (cortisol, actigraphy, heart rate variability) and qualitative (child, educator and parent interviews, socio-metric) designs. She has a particular expertise in the development, application and interpretation of observational measurement for educational practices and teacher-child interactions in education contexts, including early childhood settings. Dr Staton has a strong track record in research translation and community engagement, including delivery of reports for government and non-government organisations, professional development packages for early childhood professionals and teachers, presentations, workshops, videos and articles for parents, government regulatory officers and the early childhood sector. In 2016, she was named among Queensland’s Young Tall Poppy Scientists for her contribution to science translation and engagement. In 2019 her succesful research partnerships with industry and government was acknowledged in a Partners in Research Excellence Award from UQ.

Availability

Associate Professor Sally Staton is:
Available for supervision
Media expert

Qualifications

  • Bachelor of Creative Industries, Queensland University of Technology
  • Postgraduate Diploma, Queensland University of Technology
  • Bachelor (Honours), Queensland University of Technology
  • Doctor of Philosophy, Queensland University of Technology

Research interests

  • Human Development

  • Children and families

  • Early Childhood Education and Care policy/practices

  • Measurement of early care environments

  • Child health and well-being

  • Children’s sleep patterns and development

  • Digital Technology use

  • In-situ observation methods

  • Mealtime interactions

Research impacts

Key Examples of Research Impact include:

  • Implementation of the Assisting Observations Toolkit by the Queensland Government, Department of Education to inform practices of Authorised Officers responsible for Assessment and Rating of all Early Education and Care services in Queensland, Australia.
  • SLEEP Professional Development Program resources cited in childcare policy and procedure documents nationally, including government (e.g. Qld, SA education departments, ACECQA) and peak childcare organisations (e.g. C&K, Gowrie, Early Childhood Australia), and in doing so shaping legislative standards and practice expectations. See detailed description below.
  • Research informed national legislative changes in October 2017 (ACECQA; NQS) requiring all early childhood education and care providers to have documented policy and procedures for sleep, rest and relaxation.
  • News media coverage in over 200 media outlets nationally and internationally, including: Huffington Post, BBC, Fox News, Daily Mail, NBC, Reuters, ABC Radio, and Channel 9. I have also undertaken radio (ABC Local, and National), and television (Channel 9) interviews, with media seeking my opinion on topics including children’s sleep, napping in young children and sleep practices within the early childhood sector. In 2018 I was selected as a focus scientist for the Queensland Chief Scientist Science in Queensland Social Media Campaign.
  • SLEEP Program delivered (2015-2019) to >170 peak ECEC organisation leaders and >100 DoE regulatory officers in Qld, including the first pilot RCT study of the impacts of this program on educator practices and interaction quality between educators and children in ECEC services.
  • Research embedded within university Early Childhood training programs in Australia and internationally (UK).
  • Invitations from the Director of Research Services Qld Govt. DoE (2017 and 2018) to present the sleep project as an example of successful partnership between research and government leading to impact on educational policy and practice.
  • Delivery of the State of Early Learning in Australia Report, launched at Parliament House, Canberra, November 2019, including delivery of key indicators for Australia to inform policy and practice actions.
  • Research translation into oral language resources for ECEC educators, distributed nationally through the Evidence for Learning Website, Social Ventures Australia, and presented directly to early childhood teachers working in Australian communities experiencing high developmental vulnerability.
  • Featured scientist in state and national science engagement events and initiatives, including The Science of Sleep. ABC Radio National, Big Ideas Program (July 2019),
  • Tall Poppy Science Award for recognition of my contribution to science communication and translation and Partners in Research Excellence Award for excellence in partnerships in research with government and industry.

Works

Search Professor Sally Staton’s works on UQ eSpace

212 works between 2009 and 2025

201 - 212 of 212 works

2010

Conference Publication

Finding my way: The role of familial, community and educational relationships in two Indigenous boy’s transition to school

Bell-Booth, R., Thorpe, K., Staton, S., Thompson, C., Tayler, C. and Devine, M. (2010). Finding my way: The role of familial, community and educational relationships in two Indigenous boy’s transition to school. APS Psychology of Relationships Interest Group Conference, Brisbane, QLD Australia, 2010.

Finding my way: The role of familial, community and educational relationships in two Indigenous boy’s transition to school

2010

Other Outputs

Starting School: the role of teachers

Thompson, S., Staton, S. and Thorpe, K. (2010, 01 01). Starting School: the role of teachers AMBA Magazine

Starting School: the role of teachers

2010

Journal Article

Starting school: parental decisions

Thompson, C., Staton, Sally and Thorpe, Karen (2010). Starting school: parental decisions. AMBA Magazine.

Starting school: parental decisions

2010

Conference Publication

Building on social strengths: engaging children in the culture of education in an indigenous Australian community

Thorpe, K., Tayler, C., Staton, S., Thompson, C., Bell-Booth, R. and Devine, M. (2010). Building on social strengths: engaging children in the culture of education in an indigenous Australian community. Lifespan resilience and social inclusion: Studies with children, adolescents, and adults from a variety of cultural backgrounds. International Society for the Study of Behavioural Development, Lusaka, Zambia, 2010.

Building on social strengths: engaging children in the culture of education in an indigenous Australian community

2010

Conference Publication

Fitting in and coming to belong: promoting school attendance of Indigenous Australian children

Thorpe, K., Staton, S. and Bell-Booth, R. (2010). Fitting in and coming to belong: promoting school attendance of Indigenous Australian children. International Society for Study of Behavioural Development (ISSBD), Lusaka, Zambia, July 2010.

Fitting in and coming to belong: promoting school attendance of Indigenous Australian children

2010

Journal Article

Starting school: what children tell us

Thompson, C., Staton, Sally and Thorpe, Karen (2010). Starting school: what children tell us. AMBA Magazine.

Starting school: what children tell us

2010

Conference Publication

Inter-twin relationships and social competence in pre-school aged twin children

Thorpe, K. and Staton, S. (2010). Inter-twin relationships and social competence in pre-school aged twin children. International Society for Study of Behavioural Development (ISSBD), Lusaka, Zambia, July 2010.

Inter-twin relationships and social competence in pre-school aged twin children

2009

Conference Publication

Does being a twin make a difference to the experience of transition to school?

Thorpe, K., Young, D., Danby, S. and Staton, S. (2009). Does being a twin make a difference to the experience of transition to school?. The Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD) Biannual Meeting, Denver, CO United States, 2009.

Does being a twin make a difference to the experience of transition to school?

2009

Other Outputs

Communities for Children Mt Isa evaluation report

Thorpe, K., Tayler, C., Thompson, C., Staton, S. and Bell-Booth, R. (2009). Communities for Children Mt Isa evaluation report. Canberra, ACT Australia: Department of Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs.

Communities for Children Mt Isa evaluation report

2009

Conference Publication

Does the inter-twin relationship impede social interactions with others?

Staton, S., Thorpe, K., Thompson, C., Lockyer, J. and Danby, S. (2009). Does the inter-twin relationship impede social interactions with others?. APS Psychology of Relationships Interest Group Conference, Brisbane, QLD Australia, 2009.

Does the inter-twin relationship impede social interactions with others?

2009

Conference Publication

Measuring inter-twin relationships

Thorpe, K. and Staton, S. (2009). Measuring inter-twin relationships. APS Psychology of Relationships Interest Group Conference, Brisbane, QLD Australia, 2009.

Measuring inter-twin relationships

2009

Conference Publication

Is there a problem? Inter-twin relationships and behavioural outcomes

Staton, S., Thorpe, K., Thompson, C., Danby, S. and Young, D. (2009). Is there a problem? Inter-twin relationships and behavioural outcomes. APS Psychology of Relationships Interest Group Conference, Brisbane, QLD Australia, 2009.

Is there a problem? Inter-twin relationships and behavioural outcomes

Funding

Current funding

  • 2024 - 2026
    Places and Spaces to Thrive: Optimising Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) environments for children's health, wellbeing, and learning
    Education Horizon
    Open grant
  • 2024 - 2028
    Thriving kids, active brains: A collaborative to support early child development
    Ian Potter Foundation
    Open grant
  • 2023 - 2025
    Brain Builders Initiative
    Thriving Queensland Kids Partnership
    Open grant
  • 2023 - 2025
    Child sleep development in the context of family work lives
    ARC Discovery Early Career Researcher Award
    Open grant
  • 2020 - 2025
    The developmental significance of sleep transition in early childhood.
    ARC Discovery Projects
    Open grant

Past funding

  • 2023
    Provision of exploratory research related to early childhood data
    Australian Education Research Organisation Limited
    Open grant
  • 2022 - 2024
    Evaluating delivery experience for new diagnosis of Down syndrome or other chromosomal differences
    Research Donation Generic
    Open grant
  • 2020 - 2022
    Building Capacity for Quality Teaching in Australian Schools - New Jurisdictions (Paul Ramsay Foundation Grant led by The University of Newcastle)
    University of Newcastle
    Open grant
  • 2020 - 2022
    Evaluation of the Queensland KindyLinQ Pilot Program
    Social Ventures Australia
    Open grant
  • 2020 - 2021
    Responding to the Educational Needs of Students Experiencing Disadvantage in the COVID-19 Recovery
    Paul Ramsay Foundation Limited
    Open grant
  • 2018 - 2020
    The when, what, and how of observing and assessing practice in ECEC: Towards an observational framework for Authorised Officers in Queensland
    Education Horizon
    Open grant
  • 2018 - 2020
    Evaluation of the Building Capacity in Australian Parents (BCAP) trial and the National Community Awareness Raising (NCAR) strategy
    Commonwealth Department of Social Services
    Open grant
  • 2018 - 2019
    Equipment for naturalistic sleep-wake, circadian rhythm, and stress measurement
    UQ Major Equipment and Infrastructure
    Open grant
  • 2018 - 2019
    Improving sleep health in early childhood
    Thrasher Research Fund
    Open grant
  • 2017
    Professional Development Package and Resources for Guiding Sleep Practices in Early Childhood Education and Care Services (through the State of QLD (acting through the Dept of Education and Training))
    Queensland University of Technology
    Open grant
  • 2017 - 2018
    Choosing rest: finding effective alternatives to mandates rest-times in ECEC services
    Education Horizon
    Open grant
  • 2017 - 2021
    Sleep health and sleep problems in early childhood: What role does childcare play?
    NHMRC Early Career Fellowships
    Open grant

Supervision

Availability

Associate Professor Sally Staton is:
Available for supervision

Before you email them, read our advice on how to contact a supervisor.

Available projects

  • Sleep development in young children

  • Sleep Development

  • Physical Environments in Early Childhood Services

Supervision history

Current supervision

Completed supervision

Media

Enquiries

Contact Associate Professor Sally Staton directly for media enquiries about:

  • Child Development
  • Childcare
  • Children
  • Children's Relaxation
  • Children's Sleep
  • Early Childhood Education and Care
  • Naps
  • Naptimes
  • Preschool
  • Sleep

Need help?

For help with finding experts, story ideas and media enquiries, contact our Media team:

communications@uq.edu.au