Clarifying the Social Roots of the Disproportionate Classification of Racial Minorities and Males with Learning Disabilities.

The Sociological Quarterly Pub Date : 2018-01-01 Epub Date: 2018-07-27 DOI:10.1080/00380253.2018.1479198
Dara Shifrer
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引用次数: 29

Abstract

The disproportionate placement of racial minorities and males into special education for learning disabilities (LDs) raises concerns that classifications occur inaccurately or inequitably. This study uses data from the Education Longitudinal Survey of 2002 to investigate the social etiology of LD classifications that persist into adolescence. Findings suggest the overclassification of racial minorities is largely consistent with (clinically relevant) differences in educational performance. Classifications may occur inconsistently or subjectively, with clinically irrelevant qualities like school characteristics and linguistic- immigration history independently predictive of disability classification. Finally, classifications may be partially biased, with male overclassification largely unexplained by this study's measures and racial minorities' risk of classification increased in schools with fewer minorities (the latter not statistically significant).

Abstract Image

厘清少数族裔和男性学习障碍分类不均衡的社会根源。
少数族裔和男性在学习障碍特殊教育(LDs)中的比例过高,引发了人们对分类不准确或不公平的担忧。本研究使用2002年教育纵向调查的数据来调查持续到青春期的LD分类的社会病因。研究结果表明,对少数种族的过度分类与(临床相关的)教育表现差异在很大程度上是一致的。分类可能不一致或主观地发生,与临床无关的品质,如学校特征和语言移民史,可以独立预测残疾分类。最后,分类可能存在部分偏差,男性过度分类在很大程度上无法解释本研究的措施,少数民族在少数民族较少的学校中被分类的风险增加(后者没有统计学意义)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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