Abstract

ABSTRACTNeuro-cognitive performance is important for academic and general achievement in day-to-day life. In settings where children under the age of 18 years constitute close to half the population, yet with no routine child development assessment and intervention in place, it becomes important that factors predicting neuro-cognitive performance among them are identified and the affected aspects specified. This paper provides evidence on Zimbabwean children’s neuro-cognitive performance and the factors predicting it using a locally adapted, validated and normed Detroit Tests of Learning Aptitude fourth edition (DTLA-4). Four hundred and seventy-five school children (6–13 years) participated in the study. School type, grade, attending an urban school and age were independent predictors of overall neuro-cognitive performance. Performance did not differ with gender. Children from disadvantaged communities as depicted by school type were worst affected on items that require crystallised intelligence, cognitive level problem solving and simultaneous processing of information. These findings are important in developing targeted interventions that facilitate neuro-cognitive development and support children in low resource settings. The implications of these findings for policy, practice and research are discussed.

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