Behavior Assessment System for Children, 3rd Ed
What is the BASC-3 and what does it assess?
The Behavior Assessment System for Children, 3rd Edition (BASC-3) is a set of standardised, clinician-administered rating scales for ages roughly 2 to 25 years. It gathers information from parents, teachers and sometimes the child to describe both behavioural and emotional concerns (such as anxiety, mood, attention and conduct) and adaptive strengths (such as social skills and resilience). It is a measure that informs understanding within a wider assessment — not a diagnosis on its own.
A structured set of questionnaires that gathers many voices — parent, teacher and sometimes the child — to paint a rounded picture of how a child feels, behaves and copes.
In short
The Behavior Assessment System for Children, 3rd Edition (BASC-3) is a widely used, clinician-administered set of standardised rating scales that help describe a child or young person's behaviour and emotions across home, school and community. It looks at both areas of difficulty (such as anxiety, low mood, attention or conduct concerns) and areas of strength (such as social skills, adaptability and resilience). It is used for ages from about 2 to 25 years, and it is a measure that informs understanding — not a diagnosis on its own.What the BASC-3 assesses
The BASC-3 is a family of connected forms rather than a single test. Information is gathered from several perspectives so that no single viewpoint carries the whole story:- Teacher Rating Scales (TRS) and Parent Rating Scales (PRS) — adults who know the child rate how often certain behaviours appear.
- Self-Report of Personality (SRP) — older children and young people describe their own feelings and experiences in their own words.
- Supporting tools such as a structured developmental history and observation of behaviour.
Across these forms, the BASC-3 describes both problem areas — for example anxiety, depression, attention difficulties, hyperactivity, aggression or withdrawal — and adaptive strengths such as social skills, communication, leadership, daily living and adaptability. Looking at strengths alongside concerns gives a balanced, empowering picture of the whole child, which is far more useful than a list of problems alone.
How it is used
A qualified clinician interprets the BASC-3 as one piece of a wider picture, alongside developmental history, direct observation and other assessments. Because parents, teachers and the child may each notice different things in different settings, comparing their perspectives is often the most valuable part. The aim is to understand where a child is thriving and where targeted support may help.The Pinnacle way
A tool like the BASC-3 is informative, but it is never a diagnosis in itself — a clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care, never from a form or an app. Our clinicians weave structured measures like the BASC-3 into a warm, whole-child understanding and, where helpful, build an individualised plan drawing on child psychology and behavioural support.Trusted sources
The American Psychological Association and ASHA describe behaviour rating scales as multi-informant tools used within broader assessment; the American Academy of Pediatrics and HealthyChildren explain how parent and teacher reports support understanding of a child's development and emotional wellbeing.Next step — If you would like a clearer, balanced picture of how your child feels, behaves and copes across home and school, book a developmental assessment with our clinical team.
What to watch
Differences between how a child behaves at home versus school, persistent worry or low mood, ongoing attention or activity difficulties, or social withdrawal — these are the kinds of patterns a BASC-3 helps describe across settings.
Try this at home
Before any assessment, jot down a few real examples of what you notice at home and ask your child's teacher what they see at school — comparing both views is often the most useful part of understanding behaviour.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10 · reviewed every 365 days
This is general information, not a diagnosis. A clinical AbilityScore® and any diagnosis are formed only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, under qualified clinician care.
Frequently asked
What age range is the BASC-3 used for?
It is designed for children and young people from about 2 to 25 years, with different forms suited to different ages and informants such as parents, teachers and the young person themselves.
Is the BASC-3 a diagnosis?
No. It is a structured set of rating scales that helps describe behaviour and emotions. A qualified clinician interprets it alongside developmental history, observation and other information; any diagnosis is formed only by a clinician at a centre.
Why does it ask parents and teachers separately?
Children may behave differently at home and at school, so gathering several perspectives gives a fuller, more balanced picture than any single viewpoint alone.
Does the BASC-3 only look at problems?
No — it deliberately measures adaptive strengths such as social skills, communication, leadership and adaptability alongside any areas of concern, giving an empowering, whole-child view.