ADHD in Children: Symptoms vs Normal Behaviour — A Parent Guide
"He's just being a boy." "All kids are hyper sometimes." "She'll grow out of it."
If you're a parent in Pune wondering whether your child's energy and distractibility are normal — or signs of ADHD (Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder) — you're not alone. It's one of the most common questions we hear at Hope CDC.
This guide helps you understand the difference between typical childhood behaviour and patterns that may warrant a professional assessment.
What is ADHD, really?
ADHD is a neurodevelopmental condition that affects a child's ability to regulate attention, impulse control, and activity level. It's not laziness, bad parenting, or a lack of intelligence. Many children with ADHD are creative, energetic, and capable — they simply need the right support to channel those strengths.
Diagnosis is made by a qualified professional (paediatrician, psychiatrist, or clinical psychologist) based on persistent patterns across settings — home, school, and social situations.
Normal childhood behaviour vs ADHD
All young children are active, impulsive, and distractible to some degree. The key differences with ADHD are persistence, intensity, and impact on daily life.
Attention
Typical: A 6-year-old may lose focus after 10–15 minutes on a boring task but can concentrate on favourite activities.
May suggest ADHD: Consistently unable to finish age-appropriate tasks; frequent careless mistakes; appears not to listen even when spoken to directly; loses things constantly.
Hyperactivity
Typical: Running and climbing in appropriate settings; settling down for stories or meals with reminders.
May suggest ADHD: Always "on the go"; difficulty staying seated in class; talks excessively; struggles to play quietly even when calm play is expected.
Impulsivity
Typical: Occasional interrupting or difficulty waiting turns — especially under age 5.
May suggest ADHD: Blurting answers; difficulty waiting in line; acting without thinking about consequences; frequent social friction because of impulsive behaviour.
Three presentations of ADHD
- Predominantly inattentive — daydreaming, forgetfulness, disorganisation (sometimes missed in quiet girls)
- Predominantly hyperactive-impulsive — high energy, restlessness, impulsive actions
- Combined — significant inattention and hyperactivity-impulsivity together
Your child's presentation guides which strategies and therapies are most helpful.
When to consider an assessment
Think about an evaluation if behaviours:
- Have been present for at least six months
- Appear in multiple settings (not only at home)
- Are noticeably more intense than same-age peers
- Affect school performance, friendships, or family life
- Persist despite consistent parenting strategies
Teacher feedback is especially valuable. If school reports mirror what you see at home, that's meaningful data.
What else could it be?
Several conditions overlap with ADHD symptoms. A thorough assessment rules these in or out:
- Sleep problems — poor sleep mimics inattention and irritability
- Anxiety — worry can look like restlessness or inability to focus
- Learning difficulties — frustration from undiagnosed dyslexia or dyscalculia
- Sensory processing differences — addressed through occupational therapy
- Autism (ASD) — some attention differences co-occur with autism; autism assessment in Pune may be recommended
This is why a multi-disciplinary centre like Hope CDC is valuable — we look at the whole child, not just a checklist.
How Hope CDC supports children with ADHD
We don't diagnose ADHD medically (that's your paediatrician or psychiatrist's role), but we provide the therapy that makes day-to-day life work better. Our ADHD treatment programme in Pune includes:
- Occupational therapy — focus, organisation, sensory regulation, fine motor skills
- Behaviour therapy — impulse control, emotional regulation, social skills
- Remedial education — when attention difficulties affect reading, writing, or maths
- Parent coaching — practical routines, positive behaviour strategies, homework structure
We coordinate with your child's school and doctor when helpful, with your permission.
Practical strategies to try at home
Whether or not your child has ADHD, these approaches support attention and calm:
- Consistent daily routines with visual schedules
- Short tasks with clear start and end points
- Movement breaks between homework segments
- Reduce clutter in study areas
- Praise effort and specific behaviours, not just outcomes
- Limit screens before bedtime to protect sleep
Take the next step without pressure
Wondering about ADHD doesn't mean your child will be labelled for life. It means you're advocating for understanding and support. At Hope CDC in Kharadi and Dhanori, we offer a free initial assessment to help you make sense of what you're seeing — and build a plan that fits your child.
Try our free 2-minute screening tool on the homepage, or book a full assessment today.