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Developmental outcomes of children in classes for special educational needs: results from a longitudinal study
Author(s) -
Törmänen Minna R.K.,
Roebers Claudia M.
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
journal of research in special educational needs
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.543
H-Index - 27
ISSN - 1471-3802
DOI - 10.1111/1471-3802.12395
Subject(s) - academic achievement , special education , psychology , cognition , developmental psychology , academic skills , longitudinal study , social skills , inclusion (mineral) , executive functions , cognitive skill , social integration , mathematics education , medicine , social psychology , sociology , pathology , neuroscience , anthropology
This longitudinal study investigates the differences in cognitive and socio‐emotional development and academic achievement between children educated in special education classes (N = 37) and regular classes (N = 37). The study is retrospective. The first measurement point was while children were attending play‐oriented kindergarten and no decision about their education had yet been made. The second measurement point followed after 2 years of schooling. Comparing carefully matched groups, no differences in executive functions (EFs) were found before beginning school. Children assigned to special education had poorer language, fine motor skills and a lower pre‐academic self‐concept, self‐regulatory skills and social integration. Notably, every fourth child in special education was an immigrant, 9% of whom later attended regular classes. After 2 years of schooling in either setting, the groups differed significantly in academic achievement, EFs, fine motor skills and cognitive self‐regulatory skills. However, it was not – as school officials had intended – that children in special education classes had caught up, except in regard to their academic self‐concept and social integration.

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