You know your child better than anyone. So when something feels off — when a pattern keeps showing up that doesn't match what other kids their age are doing — that feeling is worth taking seriously. A psychological assessment isn't a last resort. It's a way to get answers.
This article walks through the kinds of things parents notice at home that are worth paying attention to — and that may be reason enough to reach out to a psychologist.
“Is This Normal?” Is the Wrong Question
Parents often spend months — sometimes years — asking whether what they're seeing is normal. They compare notes with other parents, talk to teachers, and wait to see if things improve on their own. Sometimes they do. Sometimes they don't.
The more useful question isn't “is this normal?” — it's “is this getting in the way?” If your child's behavior, attention, learning, or emotional life is consistently interfering with their relationships, schoolwork, sleep, or your family's day-to-day functioning, that's a sign something deserves a closer look.
Here's what to watch for across different areas.
Attention and Focus
Struggling to pay attention is common in children, especially young ones. But there's a difference between a kid who gets distracted during a boring worksheet and one who can't sustain focus on things they genuinely enjoy.
Signs worth noting:
Loses track of multi-step instructions, even simple ones repeated multiple times
Can't complete short tasks without constant redirection
Frequently loses things — homework, shoes, toys — in ways that feel beyond normal forgetfulness
Starts tasks but almost never finishes them without help
Acts impulsively in ways that cause real problems (not just typical kid stuff, but things that affect friendships, safety, or school)
On the flip side, some children with attention difficulties can focus for hours on something they love (video games, Legos, drawing) but fall apart the moment the task isn't self-chosen. This is actually a hallmark of ADHD, not evidence against it.
Learning and Academic Skills
Academic struggles don't always show up at school first. Often, parents notice at home first — during homework, reading aloud, or practicing writing.
Look out for:
Reading that remains slow, choppy, or effortful well past first or second grade
Difficulty learning letter sounds or connecting them to words
Avoiding reading or claiming to hate it when other activities are fine
Writing that's significantly harder than speaking — letters reversed, words misspelled in ways that don't match their age
Math facts that don't stick, even with repeated practice
A wide gap between what your child seems to understand verbally and what they can put on paper
These gaps don't mean your child isn't smart. They often mean there's a specific processing difference — something a psychoeducational assessment is designed to identify.
Social and Emotional Patterns
This is the category parents sometimes overlook because social and emotional struggles can look like personality, parenting, or “just a phase.”
Consider reaching out if:
Your child has significant difficulty making or keeping friends their age
They seem to miss social cues that other kids pick up easily (jokes, sarcasm, when someone wants to end a conversation)
Emotions escalate quickly and out of proportion to what happened
Transitions — ending screen time, switching activities, leaving the house — consistently cause meltdowns well beyond what you'd expect for their age
They seem anxious in ways that are limiting their life (avoiding school, sleep problems driven by worry, physical complaints before events)
They express feeling different, not understood, or like they don't fit in
Sensory and Developmental Concerns
These concerns are especially common in younger children but can persist into school age and beyond.
Watch for:
Extreme sensitivity to clothing textures, food textures, sounds, or lights
Covering ears in situations other kids handle fine
Strong aversion to being touched, or alternatively, seeking very intense physical sensations
Language that seems delayed compared to same-age peers
Difficulty with motor skills — handwriting, catching a ball, tying shoes — that doesn't improve with practice
When to Trust Your Gut
If you're reading this article, something has probably prompted you to look for it. That's meaningful. Parents aren't always right, but they also aren't usually wrong when something has been nagging at them for months.
You don't need a referral from your pediatrician to schedule a psychological assessment. You don't need your child's school to agree with you. And you don't need to wait until your child is falling behind to see if something might be getting in their way.
At Brinkley Psychology, we work with families across the Richmond metro — from the Fan District and Museum District to families in Henrico, Chesterfield, Midlothian, and the West End — who are navigating exactly these questions. A free consultation is a good first step — it gives you a chance to describe what you're seeing and get a professional read on whether an evaluation makes sense.
What Happens Next?
If you decide to move forward with an evaluation, the process is thorough but not intimidating. You'll provide developmental history, we'll gather information from teachers when relevant, and we'll spend time directly with your child. At the end, you get a full written report with a clear explanation of what we found and concrete recommendations — not just a diagnosis, but a plan.
Related reading: the different types of psychological assessments and how to prepare your child for testing day.


