ADHD
Standardised tools for assessing ADHD in early childhood
Early-childhood ADHD (ICD-11 6A05) assessment uses standardised, multi-informant rating scales — Conners Early Childhood/Conners-4, ADHD Rating Scale-5, SNAP-IV, Vanderbilt, SDQ and CBCL — combined with structured clinical interview and cross-setting observation. Scales support, never replace, clinician diagnosis, which at Pinnacle is formed only at a centre.
The earliest ADHD question is rarely "does this child have it?" — it is "are these standardised, age-valid measures, or are we over-labelling a three-year-old?"
In short
In early childhood, ADHD (ICD-11 6A05) is not diagnosed from a single test. Assessment uses multi-informant, standardised rating scales completed by parents and preschool staff, combined with structured clinical interview and direct observation across settings. NICE NG87 is explicit that scales support — never replace — a clinical diagnosis, and that symptoms must be pervasive, persistent and impairing relative to developmental age.The instruments in practice
For preschool and early school-age children, the commonly validated, norm-referenced tools include:- Conners Early Childhood / Conners-4 — parent and teacher forms for children from age 2.
- ADHD Rating Scale-5 (Preschool/Home & School versions) — DSM-aligned symptom counts across settings.
- SNAP-IV and the Vanderbilt Assessment Scales — multi-informant screens with impairment and comorbidity items.
- Strengths & Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ) and CBCL/C-TRF — broadband measures to capture co-occurring difficulties.
These are triangulated with developmental history, observation, and differential consideration of language delay, sleep, hearing and sensory profiles. In children under ~5, watchful monitoring and parent-training-led pathways usually precede a firm label, per NICE.
The Pinnacle way
A clinical AbilityScore® — and any diagnosis — is established only at a Pinnacle Blooms Network centre, by qualified clinicians, never from a scale alone or an online form. We use structured, clinician-administered assessment alongside these instruments to build a functional baseline for each child. Explore our ADHD pathway and child psychology services.Trusted sources
WHO ICD-11 6A05; NICE NG87 on ADHD diagnosis and management; CDC developmental milestones; American Academy of Pediatrics (HealthyChildren.org); Indian Academy of Pediatrics.Next step — Partner with Pinnacle to co-administer age-valid ADHD assessment for a young child. Begin a clinical assessment.
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.
What to watch
Symptoms that are pervasive across home and preschool, persistent over time, and impairing relative to developmental age — not situational restlessness in a single setting.
Try this at home
Gather parent and preschool observations before assessment; cross-setting agreement on the same rating scale strengthens validity far more than any single report.
Trusted sources
Developed by SETU Consortium · Pinnacle Blooms Network · Last reviewed 2026-06-10
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
Can a single rating scale diagnose ADHD in a young child?
No. Standardised scales such as Conners or the Vanderbilt are inputs only. NICE NG87 requires a full clinical assessment — history, observation across settings and exclusion of differentials — before any diagnosis, and symptoms must be pervasive, persistent and impairing for the child's developmental age.
At what age can ADHD assessment tools be used reliably?
Several instruments (e.g. Conners Early Childhood, ADHD Rating Scale-5 Preschool) are normed from around age 2–3, but in under-fives clinicians typically favour watchful monitoring and parent-training pathways before a firm diagnosis, given high developmental variability.
Why use both parent and teacher versions?
ADHD must be evident in more than one setting. Multi-informant scales capture how a child functions at home and in preschool, reducing the risk of mislabelling setting-specific behaviour as a pervasive disorder.