Author:
PAGANI LINDA,TREMBLAY RICHARD E.,VITARO FRANK,BOULERICE BERNARD,MCDUFF PIERRE
Abstract
This study examined the controversial practice of grade retention and children's
academic and behavioral adjustment using data from the Quebec Longitudinal Study of
Kindergarten Children. We employed an autoregressive modeling technique to detect the impact
of being held back during primary school on subsequent academic performance and behavioral
development until age 12 years. The results indicate both a short- and long-term negative
influence on academic performance for boys and girls. Children's anxious, inattentive, and
disruptive behaviors persisted and, in some cases, worsened after grade retention. These
prospective associations were long lasting and more pronounced when grade retention occurred
early in primary school. Boys were more vulnerable to the negative influence of grade retention
on academic performance and classroom disruptiveness. Disruptive behavior in girls was
comparatively less associated with long-term consequences than boys. Nevertheless, girls
experienced both short- and long-term academic performance problems in the aftermath of grade
retention. Children's prosocial behavior appeared unaffected by grade retention. These
results are independent of what would have been expected by the natural course of academic and
behavioral development.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Developmental and Educational Psychology
Cited by
141 articles.
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