The identification of high-school dropouts identified as learning disabled: evaluating the utility of a discriminant analysis function.

IF 2.2 3区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION, SPECIAL Exceptional Children Pub Date : 1992-03-01 DOI:10.1177/001440299205800506
L Kortering, N Haring, A Klockars
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引用次数: 36

Abstract

This study examined the utility of a linear discriminant function to distinguish between students identified as learning disabled (LD) who had either been released from high school under codes suggestive of school dropout (n = 213) or graduation (n = 92). The discriminant function was comprised of six variables--student ethnicity, reading ability, family intactness, family socioeconomic status, school transfers, and school-initiated interruptions. The analysis determined that differences between the LD dropout sample and LD graduate sample were sufficient to allow for a discrimination between the groups. On the basis of group differences the discriminant function that was constructed correctly classified 83% of the school dropouts and 46% of the school graduates, for an overall 73% accuracy rate. Those factors contributing most to the function were the number of district-initiated interruptions, school transfers, and family intactness. Based on the findings, implications for school districts and future research are noted.

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识别高中辍学生识别为学习障碍:评估判别分析函数的效用。
本研究检验了线性判别函数的效用,以区分被认定为学习障碍(LD)的学生,这些学生要么是在退学(n = 213)或毕业(n = 92)的代码下从高中释放的。判别函数由六个变量组成——学生种族、阅读能力、家庭完整性、家庭社会经济地位、转学和学校主动中断。分析确定了LD辍学样本和LD毕业生样本之间的差异足以允许组之间的歧视。在群体差异的基础上,构建的判别函数正确分类了83%的辍学者和46%的毕业生,总体准确率为73%。对该功能贡献最大的因素是学区发起的中断次数、学校转学和家庭完整性。基于这些发现,对学区和未来研究的影响被指出。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.90
自引率
14.30%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: Exceptional Children, an official journal of The Council for Exceptional Children, publishes original research and analyses that focus on the education and development of exceptional infants, toddlers, children, youth, and adults. This includes descriptions of research, research reviews, methodological reviews of the literature, data-based position papers, policy analyses, and registered reports. Exceptional Children publishes quantitative, qualitative, and single-subject design studies.
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