Psychological Testing

What Does ADHD Testing Involve?

6 min read

If you've scheduled an ADHD evaluation — or you're trying to decide whether to — it helps to know what actually happens inside the testing room. There's nothing to study for, and there's no version of "failing." The goal is an accurate picture of how your brain works.

Most evaluations start with a clinical interview. The psychologist asks about your early development, school history, work and relationship patterns, sleep, mood, medical history, and current day-to-day functioning. This part often takes 60 to 90 minutes and tends to feel more like a thoughtful conversation than a test.

From there, you'll typically complete standardized rating scales — questionnaires that compare your experience to large normative samples — and the psychologist will usually ask a partner, parent, or close friend to complete a parallel form. This isn't because your self-report doesn't count; it's because outside observers often see different parts of the pattern.

The cognitive testing portion measures attention, working memory, processing speed, and impulse control through structured tasks on paper, on a screen, or with a clinician. You may also complete screeners for anxiety, depression, and learning differences so the evaluation can distinguish ADHD from look-alike conditions.

After scoring and interpretation, you'll come back for a feedback session. The psychologist walks you through the results, talks through what they mean in plain language, and gives you specific, practical recommendations. You leave with a written report you can share with a prescriber, an employer, a school, or simply keep for yourself.

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