Teachers’ Special Education Decisions Does Test Information Make a Difference?
- 1 March 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in The Journal of Educational Research
- Vol. 80 (4) , 202-205
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00220671.1987.10885752
Abstract
Forty-five classroom teachers participated in a study designed to investigate the influence of a student’s individual psychological test performance (learning disabled [LD] vs. normal) and the achievement level of the child’s school (below average, average, above average) on their special education classification decisions. The achievement level of the school did not influence the teachers’ decisions to identify a child as handicapped. The student’s psychological test information did. For the LD case study, the teachers were more likely to have lower academic expectations and to diagnose the child as LD. In contrast to the findings of other studies, teachers were not likely to diagnose the normal case study child as handicapped. In short, these teachers did not ignore individual psychological information but rather utilized the information appropriately in their decision making.Keywords
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