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Cognitive (IQ) Assessment

A cognitive (IQ) assessment provides a detailed understanding of how a person thinks, reasons, and processes information. At iflow Psychology in Gladesville, we support individuals across Sydney, the Inner West, Ryde, Hunters Hill, Drummoyne, and broader NSW, with in-person assessments and secure telehealth components for interviews and feedback.

Using validated tools such as the WAIS-IV/WAIS-V and WISC-V, we assess areas including verbal reasoning, visual-spatial skills, working memory, and processing speed. These assessments are commonly used for school planning, workplace adjustments, DSP applications, NDIS documentation, and general cognitive review.

- Standardized IQ tests
- Memory and reasoning evaluations
- Detailed report with recommendations

Assessment Overview

A cognitive (IQ) assessment offers a structured, evidence-based evaluation of intellectual functioning. Standardised tools help clarify strengths, identify areas for support, and guide planning across education, work, and daily life.


At iflow Psychology, every assessment includes clear explanations, practical recommendations, and a concise written summary. We provide services for children, adolescents, and adults, with bilingual support available in Mandarin, Portuguese, and Shanghainese.

Key Assessment Details

Purpose

Evaluate intellectual functioning and cognitive strengths and weaknesses.

Duration

4 hours in one session

Suitable for:

Children, Adolescents, Adults

Category /Type

Cognitive

What’s Included

  • Pre-assessment interview

  • Standardised IQ testing (e.g., WAIS or WISC depending on age)

  • Assessment of reasoning, working memory, processing speed, and verbal/visual skills

  • Scoring and integrated interpretation

  • Clear summary of cognitive strengths and areas for support

  • Brief written report

  • Feedback session (telehealth or in-person)

  • Review of previous assessments, reports, or learning/workplace documentation

  • Options for bilingual assessment support (English, Mandarin, Portuguese, Shanghainese)

What to Expect

A cognitive assessment begins with a pre-assessment interview to understand the reason for testing. Standardised cognitive tasks are then completed, typically in a single session lasting up to 4 hours, depending on the person’s pace and the tools administered.


After testing, results are scored and interpreted. A follow-up session is scheduled to explain the findings, highlight strengths, and identify areas that may benefit from support. You will receive a clear written summary outlining practical recommendations for school, work, or daily functioning.


Where appropriate, interviews and feedback sessions can occur via secure telehealth across NSW. Standardised testing itself is conducted in person to ensure accuracy and validity.

Benefits

  • Clear profile of cognitive strengths and areas for support

  • Insight into reasoning, memory, and processing abilities

  • Useful information for educational or workplace planning

  • Guidance for teachers, employers, or support teams

  • Supports decisions about learning pathways or adjustments

  • Helps explain challenges affecting daily functioning

Understanding Cognitive Strengths and Learning Profiles

A cognitive (IQ) assessment explores how a person thinks, learns, and processes information. It identifies patterns across verbal reasoning, problem-solving, working memory, processing speed, and visual-spatial abilities. These insights provide a more complete understanding of strengths and areas requiring support, helping individuals approach tasks at home, school, university, or work more effectively.


The Value of Cognitive Assessment in Daily Functioning

Cognitive abilities influence many aspects of daily life—from understanding instructions and learning new information to making decisions, planning routines, and coping with academic or workplace demands. Assessment results can clarify whether difficulties relate to learning differences, attention issues, stress, or other factors. This helps guide appropriate recommendations and determine whether additional assessments (e.g., learning disability testing) may be useful.


Using Cognitive Insights to Support Growth and Wellbeing

Understanding cognitive strengths allows individuals to use their abilities more effectively, while insight into challenges supports targeted strategies for improvement. Recommendations may include adjustments to work or study routines, structured learning approaches, or strategies to enhance organisation and efficiency. These insights also support clear communication with educators, workplaces, or health professionals to ensure the person’s needs are well understood.

Fees & Funding

Our cognitive (IQ) assessments are privately billed, with fees varying depending on scope and complexity.


Typical fee ranges include:

  • Intelligence (IQ) Testing: $500–$1,000+

  • Comprehensive Cognitive Assessment: $800–$1,500+

Fees cover the full assessment process, including interview, testing, scoring, interpretation, report preparation, and feedback.


NDIS self-managed or plan-managed participants may use their funding where appropriate.
Private health insurance rebates may apply depending on your policy.
Payment plans are available.

Why Choose iflow Psychology

  • Standardised cognitive testing completed by registered psychologists

  • Clear identification of strengths and challenges

  • Practical, easy-to-understand recommendations for school, work, and daily life

  • Suitable for giftedness evaluation, learning concerns, or general cognitive review

  • Flexible scheduling with both in-clinic and telehealth components

  • Serving clients across Sydney, Gladesville, Ryde, Hunters Hill, Drummoyne, and the Inner West

  • Bilingual psychologists available (English, Mandarin, Portuguese, Shanghainese)

Ready to Take the Next Step?

Reaching out is the first step toward positive change.

📞 Call: 02 6061 1144
📧 Email: admin@iflowpsychology.com.au
💻 Book Online: Book Now (Halaxy)

If you’re in crisis, please visit our Crisis Support page.

Frequently Asked Questions

What tools are used in a cognitive assessment?

Commonly used tools include the WAIS-IV (adult assessment), WISC-V (child assessment), and other validated measures of memory, attention, or executive functioning depending on the referral question.

What are signs that a cognitive assessment may be helpful?

Common indicators include difficulties with memory, concentration, reasoning, planning, processing speed, problem-solving, or long-standing academic or workplace challenges.

What information should I bring?

Useful information includes school reports, previous assessments, workplace concerns, developmental history, medical information, or any documentation describing cognitive or learning difficulties.

Can the assessment be completed via telehealth?

Standardised cognitive tests usually require in-person administration to ensure accuracy. Interviews, questionnaires, and feedback sessions can occur via secure telehealth.

Is cognitive testing helpful for NDIS applications or reviews?

Yes. Cognitive assessments are frequently used to describe functional capacity and cognitive needs relevant to NDIS eligibility or planning. They may also support other clinicians in completing their required documentation.

What happens after the assessment?

Your psychologist reviews the results with you, explaining areas of strength and difficulty. Practical recommendations are provided for learning, work, study, daily functioning, or further assessment if required. A written report can be prepared.

How long does a cognitive assessment take?

Most assessments take 60–120 minutes depending on the test used and the person’s pace. Additional time is required for scoring, interpretation, and providing feedback.

Do I need a referral?

No referral is needed. You can book directly. A referral is only required if you intend to access Medicare-rebated therapy, not for cognitive testing.

Can a cognitive assessment diagnose a learning disability or intellectual disability?

Cognitive assessment provides essential information for diagnosing intellectual disability and contributes to diagnosing learning disorders. A full diagnostic evaluation usually requires both cognitive testing and academic achievement testing.

What does a cognitive assessment involve?

It typically includes a structured clinical interview, review of background history, and administration of a standardised cognitive test. The assessment examines multiple domains including verbal skills, reasoning, memory, and processing speed.

Why would someone complete a cognitive assessment?

People seek cognitive assessment to understand learning strengths and challenges, explore attention or memory concerns, support NDIS applications, clarify workplace or study difficulties, or contribute to diagnostic evaluations.

What is a Cognitive (IQ) Assessment?

A cognitive assessment measures thinking abilities such as reasoning, problem-solving, memory, processing speed, verbal comprehension, and visual-spatial skills. Standardised tools (such as the WAIS-IV or WISC-V) compare an individual’s performance with same-age peers.

Contact & Hours

iflow Psychology

Suite 2, 260–274 Victoria Road, Gladesville NSW 2111​

📞 02 6061 1144
📧 admin@iflowpsychology.com.au

Mon–Fri: 8:30am–6pm · Sat: 8:30am–2pm

The first step is the hardest.

We’re here to support you with the next.

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