학술논문

Developmental Relationships between Attention Problems and Reading Skills in Black and White Elementary School Students.
Document Type
Article
Source
Social Work Research; Jun2023, Vol. 47 Issue 2, p111-124, 14p
Subject
Child development
Developmental disabilities
Academic achievement
Interpersonal relations
Attention
Students
Elementary schools
Reading
Longitudinal method
Psychology of Black people
Race
Mathematical variables
Social work research
Questionnaires
Descriptive statistics
White people
Literature
Language
ISSN
10705309
Abstract
Academic performance in preschool and early elementary grades has long been linked with child attention problems. There is empirical and theoretical support that this co-occurrence is attributable to longitudinal relations between attention and reading problems. However, the literature to date—coming primarily from psychology disciplines—has insufficiently explored the possibility that the relationship between attention problems and reading performance affects students differentially. Using data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study, this inquiry extends the current literature by examining whether initial scores and rates of change in the relationship between attention problems and later reading performance vary by child's race, gender, and socioeconomic status (SES). Findings support the claim that attention and reading develop in a mutual process and reveal a complicated pattern of social and individual predictors of attention reading growth over time. Social work researchers can reframe and reinvestigate evidence derived from a psychological framing of the dual developmental processes of reading and attention within a broader understanding of the nested nature of child development within structures of oppression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]