Abstract

Although academic performance is a primary component of the federal definition of learning disabilities (LD), there have been few investigations of factors that influence academic growth among adolescents with LD. The focus of the present study is parental attitudes, their effects on adolescents with and without LD and on the academic achievement of those students. The estimated model accounted for 72% and 74% of the variance in academic achievement for the groups of students with and without LD, respectively. The findings support the position that parental expectations and perceptions of parental expectations are instrumental in raising the academic expectations and the achievement of adolescents with and without LD. The comparison between the students with and without LD showed that the most important factors were the same for both groups, suggesting the model worked in the same way for the two populations.

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