Parent Guide

When Should Parents Consider a Developmental Assessment?

Deciding Next Steps7 min readReviewed: 2026-07-16
When to consider a developmental assessment

A developmental assessment can be useful when several areas of your child's development, learning or behaviour raise questions over time, when a teacher or therapist suggests a fuller picture would help, or when your parental sense is that something more is going on. Similar observations can have very different explanations, so an assessment helps understand the whole child in context.

Who this guide is for

Parents who are weighing up whether a formal developmental assessment is worthwhile, and who want to think through what an assessment would and would not do.

Observations parents may notice

  • Concerns have been present for months rather than a passing phase.
  • Multiple people — parents, teachers, grandparents — are noticing similar things.
  • Your child is coping but working much harder than peers to keep up.
  • Home strategies help a little but are not enough.

Information that may be useful to collect

  • A brief timeline: what you noticed, when, and how it has changed.
  • School feedback in writing where possible.
  • Any previous therapy or assessment reports, even older ones.
  • Notes on sleep, appetite, mood and energy patterns.

When professional review may be helpful

  • Concerns are affecting learning, friendships or family life.
  • A specific developmental question would change how you support your child.
  • You want a coordinated view rather than piecemeal advice.

What the clinic consultation may consider

  • Whether the concerns fit a developmental pattern or reflect other factors.
  • Which further assessments (if any) would add useful information.
  • How your child's strengths can be built on alongside any areas of difficulty.
  • A plan that fits your family and school context.

Similar observations can have very different explanations. An appropriate clinical assessment considers the wider context of your child's development, learning, health, family and school life. Online information cannot provide a diagnosis.

Common questions

Is my child too young for an assessment?
Developmental review can be helpful across a wide age range. Send an enquiry describing your child's age and concerns and the clinic team will advise.
What if the assessment finds nothing?
That itself is useful information. A careful review may reassure you, refine strategies, or point to non-developmental factors worth exploring.
Does an assessment always lead to a label?
No. Not all assessments end with a diagnosis. The purpose is to understand your child, not to give a label for its own sake.
How do I explain the idea to my child?
Keep it simple and matter-of-fact — for example, that you are meeting someone who helps children with learning and how they feel.

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