Overview
Background
Associate Professor Sally Staton is an applied developmental scientist whose research focuses on how early life experiences, environments, and the systems that support children shape lifelong learning, development, brain health, and wellbeing. As an ARC Mid-Career Industry Fellow and Leader of the Brain Health and Early Development Research Group at The University of Queensland's Child Health Research Centre, she works at the intersection of developmental science, policy, and practice to generate and translate evidence to support children, families, and communities.
Her research examines how early experiences and the physical and social environments in which children and families live, learn, and grow influence health and development across the life course. A major focus of her work is understanding how early childhood education and care (ECEC) environments, sleep, and the design of physical and interactional spaces support children's development. She currently leads the ARC-funded Building Futures project, which is generating evidence to inform the design of early childhood learning environments, and recently completed the STARs study, a landmark longitudinal investigation of sleep development in children aged 1–5 years.
Working closely with governments, educators, non-government organisations, communities, and philanthropic partners, Sally co-designs and translates research to inform policy, practice, and systems change. She also leads the Brain Builders Initiative, a major research and translation program focused on applying contemporary knowledge of brain development across the systems and workforces that support children and families.
Sally has authored more than 200 publications and research outputs. Her work has informed national and international policy and practice, including reforms to Australian early childhood legislation and contributions to policy recommendations from organisations including the OECD and WHO. In recognition of her research impact and science communication, she was named one of Australia's Young Tall Poppy Scientists and invited to participate in the United Nations Science Summit on Brain Health. Her overarching goal is to ensure that research is translated into practical action that helps children, families, and communities thrive.
Availability
- Associate Professor Sally Staton is:
- Available for supervision
- Media expert
Fields of research
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
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Human Development
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Children and families
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Early Childhood Education and Care policy/practices
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Measurement of early care environments
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Child health and well-being
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Children’s sleep patterns and development
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Digital Technology use
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In-situ observation methods
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Mealtime interactions
Research impacts
Key Examples of Research Impact:
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Informing legislation and regulation: Research on children's sleep, rest and relaxation practices in Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) contributed to national legislative and regulatory changes in 2017, 2021 and 2025, including requirements for all ECEC services to maintain documented sleep and rest policies and procedures.
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Shaping regulatory practice: Development of the Assisting Observations Toolkit for the Queensland Government Department of Education, which has been adopted to support the assessment and rating practices of Authorised Officers responsible for regulating ECEC services across Queensland.
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Transforming professional practice: Development and delivery of the SLEEP Professional Development Program, with resources adopted by government agencies, regulators, peak bodies and service providers nationally.
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Advancing understanding of sleep development: Leadership of a landmark program of research examining sleep development from infancy through early childhood, generating evidence on the role of social, physical and educational environments in shaping children's sleep, health, learning and wellbeing.
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Informing the design of children's environments: Leading the ARC-funded Building Futures program, which is generating evidence to inform the design of early childhood learning environments and support future policy, regulatory, and infrastructure decisions relating to places and spaces where children learn and develop.
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Strengthening policy and systems: Research has informed national and international policy and advisory documents, including contributions cited by organisations such as ACECQA, the Productivity Commission, OECD and WHO.
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Building workforce capability: Development of evidence-informed resources, training programs, toolkits, webinars, podcasts and professional learning materials used by educators, government agencies, child and family services, and community organisations across Australia.
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Leading brain development translation: Lead of the Brain Builders Initiative, a cross-sector research and translation program applying contemporary knowledge of brain development across government, non-government, health, education and community systems supporting children and families.
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National and international science communication: Research featured in more than 200 media reports globally, including coverage by the BBC, Reuters, NBC, CBS, The New York Times, Washington Post, ABC, and Australian Financial Review. Sally has also contributed to major science engagement initiatives through the Queensland Chief Scientist, ABC Radio National's Big Ideas, Words Grow Minds, and other public-facing platforms.
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Recognition for impact and translation: Recipient of the Young Tall Poppy Science Award for excellence in science communication and engagement, and awards recognising excellence in research translation, partnership and collaboration with government, industry and community organisations.
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Informing sector-wide practice and policy: Leadership of major reports, evaluations and evidence reviews for government, NGOs and peak bodies, including the State of Early Learning in Australia Report, launched at Parliament House, to inform national discussion and policy development in the early years sector.
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Influencing professional and public understanding: Delivery of more than 100 invited presentations, keynote addresses and workshops for scientific, policy, professional and public audiences.
Works
Search Professor Sally Staton’s works on UQ eSpace
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.
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.
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.
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.
Funding
Current funding
Supervision
Availability
- Associate Professor Sally Staton is:
- Available for supervision
Looking for a supervisor? Read our advice on how to choose a supervisor.
Available projects
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Sleep Development
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Physical Environments in Early Childhood Services
Supervision history
Current supervision
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Doctor Philosophy
Supporting educators in their response to behaviours that challenge in early childhood education and care (ECEC) services
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Karen Thorpe, Dr Sandy Houen
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Doctor Philosophy
Investigating the Relationship between Sleep and Transitions in Early Childhood
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Peter Rankin
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Doctor Philosophy
An Ecological Case Study of Early Childhood Education and Care in Normanton
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Karen Thorpe
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Doctor Philosophy
Same Educator, Different Day
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Sandy Houen, Professor Karen Thorpe
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Doctor Philosophy
Characterizing the relationship between sleep and developmental outcomes in childhood
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Karen Thorpe, Associate Professor Jasneek Chawla
Completed supervision
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2026
Doctor Philosophy
Innovation in measurement of child attachment behaviour in Early Childhood Education and Care: A focus on separations and reunions at drop-off and pick-up
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Karen Thorpe, Dr Sandy Houen
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2026
Doctor Philosophy
Daylight and bedtimes: Sleep and light exposure in 12-month-old infants
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Dwayne Mann, Dr Alicia Allan, Professor Simon Smith
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2021
Doctor Philosophy
Relaxation and Unrest: A Crystallization of Children's Experiences in Early Childhood Education and Care
Principal Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Karen Thorpe
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2025
Doctor Philosophy
Children's everyday encounters with death/s: a non-sociological investigation
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Professor Rebecca Olson
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2024
Doctor Philosophy
The Significance of Nap Cessation for Children's Social-emotional Functioning
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Dr Peter Rankin, Professor Karen Thorpe, Professor Simon Smith
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2024
Doctor Philosophy
Why mealtimes matter: food provision and practices in childcare centres serving low-income communities.
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Adjunct Professor Robyn Littlewood, Professor Karen Thorpe
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2023
Doctor Philosophy
Sleep in Children with Down syndrome: Improving Outcomes
Associate Advisor
Other advisors: Associate Professor Honey Heussler
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
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