Employment of Youth with and without Handicaps Following High School
- 1 October 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in The Journal of Special Education
- Vol. 23 (3) , 243-255
- https://doi.org/10.1177/002246698902300302
Abstract
Factors associated with the employment status of students with and without handicaps were investigated in a sample of 133 youths from nine Vermont school districts. Students with handicaps who exited high school in 1984-85, and who had been receiving special education services, were identified and compared to non-college-bound, vocationally oriented students without handicaps. Two sets of interviews were conducted, one in 1986 and one in 1987. During these interviews, information was obtained on current employment status, employment and training history, social service utilization, and residential status. Additional information regarding educational history, age, and community demographics was obtained through individual student records. Employment, educational, and residential experiences were compared across both groups of former students. Results indicated that students without handicaps had more favorable post-high-school employment outcomes than students with handicaps. Across groups, males were more likely to be employed than females and employment was positively associated with paid work experiences during high school. Vocational class experience was positively associated with later employment for handicapped but not for nonhandicapped students. Although some changes in employment status over the 2-year period did occur, the majority of former students remained in the same employment status (full time, part time, or unemployed) for both years. The results of the study help to put the employment status of youth with handicaps into context and suggest both similarities and differences between students with and without handicaps in employment correlates.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Education for All Handicapped Children Act: Schools as Agents of Social ReformHarvard Educational Review, 1987
- Secondary Programs in Special Education: Are Many of Them Justifiable?Exceptional Children, 1987
- One-Fifth of the Nation's TeenagersYouth & Society, 1987
- Factors Associated with the Employment Status of Handicapped Youth Exiting High School from 1979 to 1983Exceptional Children, 1985
- A Report on the Colorado Statewide Follow-up Survey of Special Education StudentsExceptional Children, 1985
- Job preferences (What makes a job good or bad?).Journal of Applied Psychology, 1978