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Psychological Assessment for Children and Teens in Richmond, VA
Assessment for Children and Teens
When Something is Getting in the Way, You Deserve to Know What It Is.
Every parent knows the feeling. Something feels off, either in the classroom, at home, in friendships, or in how the child feels about themselves, but you can’t quite put your finger on what it is or what to do about it. You’ve wondered whether to wait and see, whether this is a phase, whether you’re reading too much into it.
You are not overreacting, and waiting rarely makes things clearer.
A comprehensive psychological evaluation can provide what observations alone cannot: an accurate, complete picture of how your child learns, processes, and experiences the world and a clear plan for how to support them.
Every Child is Different. Every Evaluation Should Be Too.
Children struggle for different reasons, and those reasons matter. A child who is disruptive in class may be bored, anxious, impulsive, or exhausted from working twice as hard as their peers to keep up. A child who is withdrawn may be depression, socially overwhelmed, or quietly navigating a world that doesn’t quite make sense to them. A child whose grades have slipped may be dealing with a learning disorder, an attention difficulty, an emotional challenge or a combination of all three.
Getting the right answer requires looking at the full picture. That is what a comprehensive evaluation does.
Areas of Assessment
ADHD/ ADD
If your child is struggling behaviorally, emotionally, socially, or academically, ADHD may be part of the picture. At its core, ADHD is a disorder of executive functioning, affecting a child’s ability to plan, focus, manage impulses, regulate emotions, and follow through. It doesn’t always look like hyperactivity. Many children with ADHD appear to be managing fine on the surface, only for difficulties to surface more significantly as academic and life demands increase with age. Early identification means earlier support before the gap becomes harder to close.
Learn More about ADHD/ADD Evaluations
Dyslexia & Reading Disorders
Dyslexia is the most common learning disorder identified in children and one of the most frequently missed. Because reading shows up in every subject, a reading disorder rarely stays contained to language arts. It can create broad, hard-to-explain struggles across the school day, and over time, carry a significant emotional weight. A comprehensive evaluation identifies not just whether a reading disorder is present, but exactly where the difficulty lies so that support can be targeted and effective.
Learn More about Dyslexia and Reading Disorder Evaluations
Dyscalculia & Math Disorders
When a child’s math performance is significantly behind their abilities in other areas, and when that gap persists despite effort and support, a Specific Learning Disorder in Mathematics may be worth exploring. Dyscalculia is not one single profile: difficulties can involve number sense and sequencing, recalling math facts, or the visual-spatial demands of math. Identifying the specific pattern is the foundation for building interventions that actually help.
Learn More about Dyscalculia and Math Disorder Evaluations
Autism Spectrum Disorder
Autism looks different in every child, and many presentation, particularly in children who excel academically, go unrecognized for years. What may appear to be shyness, anxiety, or social disinterest is often something more nuanced: a child who genuinely wants connection but finds the unwritten rules of social interaction difficult to read. Some children mask their symptoms effectively at school, only to come home depleted. A thorough evaluation can identify subtle presentations, provide validation for your child’s experience, and open the door to meaningful, individualized support.
Learn More about Autism Evaluations
The Emotional Side of Struggling
Whatever the underlying challenge, the experience of struggling without explanation carries its own cost. Children who don’t receive answers often fill the gap with painful ones of their own, concluding that they are not smart enough, not trying hard enough, or simply not as capable as the kids around them.
Identification is not able labeling a child. It is about giving them and you an accurate picture of who they are. It protects them from carrying a story that was never true.
You Know Your Child. I Know the Process. Together, We Figure Out the Rest.
Here's something I want every parent to know before we ever begin: you are not a passive participant in this process. You are the expert on your child — their history, their personality, what makes them light up, and what makes school feel impossible. I am the expert on the evaluation process. When we bring those two things together, we can build a picture of your child that is accurate, complete, and actually useful.
This is a collaborative relationship from the very beginning. Before any testing takes place, we'll connect by phone so I can walk you through what the process involves, answer your questions, and learn what you need. If there's anything specific going on with your child (scheduling constraints, attentional needs, anxiety about new situations) we'll talk through it and plan accordingly. No two children are the same, and the evaluation process shouldn't treat them as though they are.
A Process Built Around Your Child — Not the Other Way Around
One of the things I feel most strongly about is that the assessment should fit the child, not the other way around. That means the tools I use, the structure of the sessions, and the pacing of the process are all shaped by what will give your child the best opportunity to show what they're truly capable of.
If your child does better in shorter sessions, we'll work with that. If there are particular concerns or co-occurring challenges that need to be part of the picture, we'll make sure they're included. The goal is never simply to collect scores. It's to understand your child fully, in a way that reflects who they actually are.
What to Expect When You Work With Me
Before any testing begins, we’ll connect by phone. You’ll share what you’ve been observing, ask whatever questions are on your mind, and we’ll talk through what kind of evaluation makes sense for your child. From there, the process is tailored to your child’s age, needs, scheduling, and the specific questions we’re trying to answer.
When the evaluation is complete, you’ll receive a comprehensive written report and we’ll review the results together in plain language. Not just scores, but real answers: what this means for your child, what the school should know, and what you can do. If questions come up down the road, at an IEP meeting, during the new school year, or simply as your child grows, I remain a resource and an ally for your family.
You are the expert on your child. I am the expert on the evaluation process. Together, we can get your child the clarity and support they deserve.
The Evaluation Is a Beginning, Not an Endpoint
Once we've worked together, I don't consider my role finished. I see myself as part of your child's educational team , not just for the duration of the evaluation, but going forward. Parents I've worked with are always welcome to reach back out with questions as new situations arise: whether that's navigating an IEP meeting, understanding a new teacher's concerns, finding the right specialist or tutor, or simply making sense of something that didn't quite land the first time.
Getting the evaluation is an important step. But knowing how to use it in real time, as your child grows and their needs evolve is where the real value lives. That ongoing connection is something I'm genuinely glad to offer.
If You're Not Sure Where to Start, Start Here
You don't need to have everything figured out before reaching out. You don't need the perfect description of what's going on or a clear sense of what you're looking for. If you have a feeling that something is worth exploring, that's enough.
Reach out to schedule a phone consultation. No commitment, no pressure, just a conversation. I'd be glad to hear what's on your mind and help you think through whether an evaluation might be a useful next step for your family.
Campbell Psychological Wellness offers comprehensive psychological evaluations for children and teens including assessment for ADHD, autism, learning disorders, and other conditions. Schedule a consultation today.
FAQs about Child and Teen Psychological Evaluations with Campbell Psychological Wellness
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Therapy and psychological assessments serve different purposes, though both can be conducted by licensed clinical psychologists. Therapy focuses on ongoing support to improve mental health, manage symptoms, or develop coping strategies.
A psychological assessment or evaluation, on the other hand, is a structured process to understand your cognitive, emotional, or behavioral functioning. These evaluations provide diagnostic clarity, identify conditions such as ADHD, autism, mood disorders, or trauma-related concerns, and include a written report with recommendations for treatment, academic planning, or occupational needs.
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I perform comprehensive assessment to evaluate for diagnoses including: ADHD, Learning Disorders (Dyslexia, Math, Writing), mood disorders, and other psychological disorders.
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No problem. Many people are unsure which type of assessment is appropriate when they first reach out. During the initial consultation and clinical interview, we will clarify your concerns and goals together. Form there, I will help determine the most appropriate psychological evaluation to address your questions and guide the evaluation process.
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I provide psychological evaluations for children 6 and older. During an initial consultation, we discuss your specific concerns to determine whether an evaluation is appropriate and the best fit for the individual being referred.
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You may consider an evaluation if your child is not performing at their expected level at school or home, or if therapy does not seem to be working with their existing treatment plan.
These could be indications that there may be an underlying cause negatively impacting your child’s functioning or that there is a need for diagnostic clarity.
Psychological evaluations are also helpful, and sometimes necessary, for getting accommodations at school or being prescribed certain medications.
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You will receive a full psychological evaluation that highlights your child’s strengths and identifies areas for growth, as well as diagnostic information to answer your questions.
You will also receive a list of customized recommendations that will serve to promote your child’s overall well-being and optimal functioning.
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Currently, I am unable to provide psychological evaluations exclusively via telehealth. I primarily provide psychological evaluations in Richmond, Midlothian, Chesterfield, Goochland, and Henrico, Virginia.
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Yes. A comprehensive psychological evaluation is designed to look at the whole picture, not just a single concern. Good assessments identify what is present, but also carefully consider what does not fit in order to rule out other explanations.
It is also common for more than one condition or concern to be present at the same time (often referred to as comorbidity). The evaluation process is intended to clarify these overlapping patterns so that the results are accurate, meaningful, and clinically useful.
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Psychological evaluations are an investment in understanding your child or teen’s emotional, behavioral, or cognitive functioning. While I am not in-network with insurance providers, many families are able to use out-of-network benefits for partial reimbursement, depending on their plan.
If your insurance offers out-of-network coverage, I will provide a detailed invoice that you can submit directly to your insurance company.
Following a free initial consult, I will provide you an estimate specifically for your child, based on their needs and your referral question.
For a more detailed breakdown of fees for a psychological evaluation for a child or teen, visit Insurance and Rates.