The Association between Parental Educational Expectations and School Functioning among Young People with Disabilities: A Longitudinal Investigation

Author:

O’Donnell Alexander W.1ORCID,Redmond Gerry2,Arciuli Joanne3,Robinson Sally3,Skattebol Jennifer4,Raghavendra Parimala3,Thomson Cathy4,Wang Joanna J. J.5,Emerson Eric367

Affiliation:

1. School of Psychological Sciences, University of Tasmania, Launceston, Australia

2. College of Business, Government, & Law, Flinders University, Australia

3. College of Nursing and Health Sciences, Caring Futures Institute, Flinders University, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia

4. Social Policy Research Centre, Arts, Design & Architecture, UNSW Sydney, Australia

5. School of Mathematical and Physical Sciences, University of Technology Sydney, Australia

6. Centre for Disability Research and Policy, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, Australia

7. Centre for Disability Research, Faculty of Health & Medicine, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK

Abstract

Past research has established clear educational inequities between young people with disabilities and their peers. In part, some of these inequities may be attributed to expectations. In this study, we examined whether parental expectations were related to school functioning at high school, with school functioning broadly defined as ease and frequency of engagement in school-based activities. Using the Longitudinal Study of Australian Children ( N = 3,956; 48.9% female; 5.01% with disability), we examined parental expectations and school functioning measured at three time-points, biennially from the ages of 12 and 13 through to 16 and 17. A multigroup, parallel latent growth curve analysis revealed that high parental expectations at the first timepoint predicted steeper increases in the trajectory of school functioning over time, but only among young people with disability. Parental expectations did not significantly predict school functioning trajectories for the remainder of the sample. Subsequent multigroup analyses that compared disability characteristics revealed that learning difficulties and speech problems, in particular, were associated with lower parental expectations. These results suggest that the perceptions of parents in the lives of young people with disability are important and efforts to shape them may have long-term benefits.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Developmental and Educational Psychology,Education

Reference69 articles.

1. Educational Expectations, Parental Social Class, Gender, and Postsecondary Attainment

2. Adolescents’ self-report of school satisfaction: The interaction between disability and gender.

3. Baker, K., Sipthorp, M. & Edwards, B. (2017). A longitudinal measure of socioeconomic position in LSAC: LSAC Technical Paper No. 18. https://growingupinaustralia.gov.au/sites/default/files/tp18.pdf

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