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Reading Achievement, Mastery, and Performance Goal Structures Among Students With Learning Disabilities: A Nonlinear Perspective.

Authors :
Sideridis GD
Stamovlasis D
Antoniou F
Source :
Journal of learning disabilities [J Learn Disabil] 2016 Nov; Vol. 49 (6), pp. 631-643. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Mar 19.
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to examine the hypothesis that a nonlinear relationship exists between a performance-classroom climate and the reading achievement of adolescent students with learning disabilities (LD). Participants were 62 students with LD (Grades 5-9) from public elementary schools in northern Greece. Classroom climate was assessed using the Patterns of Adaptive Learning Styles. Achievement in reading was assessed using a normative reading assessment. Data were analyzed by means of catastrophe theory in which the behavior is predicted as a function of two control variables, the asymmetry factor and the bifurcation factor. Reading achievement (word identification) was predicted by students' ability to decode pseudowords (asymmetry variable) and by a mastery or performance motivational discourse (bifurcation factor). Results indicated that in classrooms with a performance goal structure, the cusp model fit the data and accounted for 54% of the variance in real word identification. In this condition, the association between pseudoword reading and real word reading was nonlinear. When a mastery climate was tested as a bifurcation variable, results indicated that its effect was nonsignificant and that instead the linear model fitted the data more adequately. Thus, increases in a classroom's performance motivational discourse are associated with sudden, unpredictable, and discontinued changes in students' reading performance.<br /> (© Hammill Institute on Disabilities 2015.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1538-4780
Volume :
49
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of learning disabilities
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
25792625
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0022219415576524