Is Your Child Developing Normally? Early Signs of Autism, ADHD and Learning Disabilities — When to See a Child Psychologist
Indore (Madhya Pradesh) [India], June 22: Every year, thousands of Indian families arrive at child development clinics with the same quiet regret: “We noticed something was different, but we...
- Does not respond to their name by 9 months.
- Rarely or never makes eye contact during play or conversation.
- Does not wave, clap, or point to show interest by 12 months.
- No first words by 16 months; not combining two words by 24 months.
- Lost words or skills they previously had — at any age.
- Gets very upset over small routine changes — a different route, a moved object.
- Distressed by everyday sounds, certain fabrics, lights, or food textures.
- Little or no interest in other children; strongly prefers to be alone.
- No pretend play — not playing teacher, doctor, or house by age 4.
- Repeats the same actions, phrases, or routines over and over.
- Cannot stay with any activity — including ones they enjoy — for more than a few minutes
- Forgets instructions almost immediately after hearing them
- Loses the same items repeatedly — water bottle, pencil box, shoes
- Cannot wait — interrupts conversations, cannot take turns, calls out answers in class
- Acts without thinking — touches things they should not, speaks without considering impact
- Cannot remain seated at meals, during homework, or in class; constantly fidgets
- School consistently reports “not paying attention” or “disturbing others”
- Clearly capable but marks do not reflect ability
- Pattern appears at home, at school, and with friends — not in just one place
- Reverses letters and numbers well past age 7 — b/d, p/q, 6/9 — regularly, not occasionally.
- Handwriting is very hard to read; writing feels physically tiring or painful.
- Can explain answers verbally but cannot write them down.
- Mixes up similar-sounding words — “aminal” for “animal,” “pasghetti” for “spaghetti”.
- Can follow one instruction at a time but loses track when given two together.
- Same maths concept explained repeatedly — still does not stay.
- Dread’s school, avoids reading aloud, cries before exams, or asks to stay home regularly.

- My child does not respond to their name — could it be autism? Absence of name response by 9 months, especially alongside limited eye contact and no pointing, is a recognised early indicator. It warrants a professional evaluation — not a wait-and-watch approach.
- Can a child have both ADHD and a learning disability? Yes. Co-occurring conditions are common — a child may have ADHD alongside dyslexia, or autism alongside ADHD. This is why a comprehensive psychological assessment matters: it maps the full picture, not just one diagnosis.
- At what age should a child be assessed? As early as concerns arise. There is no minimum age for a developmental evaluation. The earlier a concern is identified, the earlier the right support begins.





