One of the most common things parents tell me when they first come to my practice is: “I don’t think the school is the right fit but I don’t know how to explain it.”
They sense something is off. Their child is coming home crying, shutting down, or exploding with frustration. Teachers are sending home complaints. And the parent is caught between trusting their gut and wondering if they’re being too difficult.
Here’s what I’ve learned after years of working with families: your instincts are usually right. The challenge is knowing what to look for so you can articulate it clearly and make a decision that’s actually right for your child.
This post is that guide. A practical, clear-eyed look at what a school that supports energetic, high-energy children actually looks like and what should give you pause.
Why School Environment Matters More Than You Think
Before we get into the flags, I want to explain something important.
A child’s experience at school isn’t just about academics. For high-energy children, especially those with ADHD, sensory sensitivities, or simply a more active nervous system the school environment directly affects how their brain regulates itself every single day.
When a child is constantly being told to sit still, stay quiet, and conform to a rigid structure that their nervous system genuinely can’t sustain, it doesn’t just create behavioral problems. Over time, it creates shame. Children begin to believe something is wrong with them. That story, once it takes root, is much harder to undo than any academic gap.
The right school environment doesn’t just accommodate your child. It helps them thrive. So choosing it carefully is not being overprotective, it’s being a good advocate.
🚩 Red Flags: What Should Give You Pause
1. Rigid, one-size-fits-all seating rules
If a school’s answer to focus problems is “everyone must sit at their desk, in their chair, facing forward, all day” that’s a concern. We know from decades of research that movement supports attention, not undermines it. A school that treats stillness as discipline and movement as defiance is working against how many children’s brains actually function.
2. Punishment-first approach to behavior
Pay close attention to how the school talks about behavior management. If you hear a lot of “consequences,” “warnings,” “losing privileges,” or “sent to the principal” with very little mention of why children behave the way they do, that’s a red flag. Punishment-focused schools often don’t distinguish between a child who won’t behave and a child who can’t behave at that moment. For energetic children, that difference is everything.
3. Little to no outdoor or movement time
When I ask parents how much unstructured outdoor time their child gets at school, I’m often shocked by the answer. Twenty minutes. Sometimes less. Some schools have cut recess almost entirely in favor of more classroom time. For high-energy children, this counterproductive movement isn’t a reward, it’s a biological need. A school that treats outdoor time as optional is a school that doesn’t understand how children’s bodies and brains work.
4. Staff who talk about your child, not to you
Notice the tone of parent-teacher conversations. Is the teacher describing your child with curiosity “I’ve noticed he does better when…” or with frustration “He’s always disrupting the class”? Teachers who haven’t been trained in understanding different learning profiles often default to labeling rather than problem-solving. That attitude trickles down to how they treat your child every day.
5. No mention of individual learning needs
If you ask “how do you support children who learn differently?” and the answer is vague or defensive, take note. A school confident in its approach will have a clear, specific answer. Uncertainty here often means the support simply isn’t there.
✅ Green Flags: What Good Actually Looks Like
1. Flexible seating and learning arrangements
A school that offers wobble chairs, standing desks, floor cushions, or even just allows children to shift positions during class has already understood something fundamental: children focus better when their bodies are comfortable. This isn’t indulgence. It’s good neuroscience in practice.
2. A sensory-aware or sensory-friendly space
Some schools have dedicated sensory rooms, quiet, low-stimulation spaces where a child can go to regulate before returning to class. Even schools without a formal sensory room can be sensory-aware: dim lighting options, reduced classroom clutter, noise-reducing materials. These details signal that the school has thought about children who experience the environment more intensely.
3. Trained, curious staff
The single biggest green flag is a teacher who is genuinely curious about your child. Who asks questions. Who says, “Let me try something different and see what works.” Training matters staff who have received professional development in ADHD, sensory processing, or differentiated learning are simply better equipped. But even without formal training, a teacher’s attitude of openness and warmth can make an enormous difference.
4. Proactive communication with parents
Green flag schools don’t wait until there’s a crisis to call you. They check in. They share observations. They invite you into the conversation about your child rather than presenting you with a problem to solve. That kind of partnership between school and home is one of the strongest predictors of how well an energetic child will do.
5. Positive, relationship-based discipline
Ask directly: “How does the school handle difficult behavior?” Look for answers that involve understanding the child, building connection, and teaching skills, not just imposing consequences. Schools that use restorative approaches or social-emotional learning frameworks have moved beyond punishment and into something that actually produces change.
6. Genuine outdoor and movement time
A school that protects recess that doesn’t use it as a punishment, that gives children real unstructured time to run and play is a school that understands children. Bonus points if they integrate movement into the classroom itself: brain breaks, movement-based learning, PE that’s genuinely active.
How to Actually Evaluate a School
Before admission or at any point during the year, here are the questions worth asking directly:
- “How do you support children who have difficulty sitting still or staying focused?”
- “What does your behavior management approach look like?”
- “How much outdoor time do children get each day?”
- “Have your teachers received any training in ADHD or sensory needs?”
- “How do you involve parents when a child is struggling?”
Notice not just what they say, but how they say it. Do they seem defensive? Dismissive? Or genuinely engaged? The conversation itself tells you a great deal.
A Final Word
You are not asking for special treatment when you want a school that works for your child. You are asking for what every child deserves: an environment that sees them fully, supports how they’re wired, and helps them grow.
Not every school will be the right fit. And that’s okay. What matters is that you know what to look for so you can find the one that is.