Learning Disabilities, Low Achievement, and Mild Mental Retardation
- 1 November 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Learning Disabilities
- Vol. 29 (6) , 570-581
- https://doi.org/10.1177/002221949602900601
Abstract
Children identified with learning disabilities (LD), low achievement (LA), or mild mental retardation (MMR) were contrasted on 41 measures of ability, academic achievement, social skills, problem behavior, academic engaged time, perceptual-motor skills, and school history. Both multivariate, univariate, and meta-analytic comparisons among the three groups showed relatively large differences on measures of aptitude and achievement, with the LD group scoring higher on measures of cognitive ability than the LA and MMR groups and the LA group showing higher tested academic achievement than the LD and MMR groups. Teacher ratings of academic competence showed similar levels of functioning for the LD and LA groups. No differences among the groups were found on measures of social skills, problem behaviors, or academic engaged time, or on most indices reflecting school history. Results were interpreted in light of studies contrasting LD and LA groups. Comparisons with earlier studies were difficult in light of demographic differences in samples and the lower cognitive and academic functioning of children in the present study. The current study showed that 61% of the LD group could be differentiated from the LA group, with LD—MMR and LA—MMR differentiation levels being 68.51% and 67.5%, respectively.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Challenge to the Viability of Mild Mental Retardation as a Diagnostic CategoryExceptional Children, 1996
- Special Education in Urban AmericaThe Journal of Special Education, 1994
- Externalizing behavior problems and academic underachievement in childhood and adolescence: Causal relationships and underlying mechanisms.Psychological Bulletin, 1992
- Teacher Ratings of Academic Skills: The Development of the Academic Performance Rating ScaleSchool Psychology Review, 1991
- Teacher-Based Judgments of Academic Achievement: A Review of LiteratureReview of Educational Research, 1989
- Teachers as “Tests”: Classification Accuracy and Concurrent Validation in the Identification of Learning Disabled ChildrenSchool Psychology Review, 1987
- An analysis of the conceptual framework underlying definitions of learning disabilitiesJournal of School Psychology, 1985
- Teacher as imperfect test: Reconceptualizing the referral processEducational Psychologist, 1984
- “I Know One When I See One” — Differentiating LD and Non-LD StudentsLearning Disability Quarterly, 1984
- The Factorial Structure of the Raven Coloured Progressive Matrices Test: a ReanalysisEducational and Psychological Measurement, 1980