Diagnostic Overshadowing Among School Psychologists Working with Hearing-Impaired Learners

Diagnostic overshadowing is the existence of a primary diagnosis that alters the diagnostic and treatment recommendations resulting from a secondary disability. It biases school psychologists' diagnostic and treatment ratings of behaviorally disordered learners with a primary diagnosis of learn...

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Veröffentlicht in:American annals of the deaf (Washington, D.C. 1886) D.C. 1886), 1986-10, Vol.131 (4), p.288-293
Hauptverfasser: Goldsmith, Larry, Schloss, Patrick J.
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container_end_page 293
container_issue 4
container_start_page 288
container_title American annals of the deaf (Washington, D.C. 1886)
container_volume 131
creator Goldsmith, Larry
Schloss, Patrick J.
description Diagnostic overshadowing is the existence of a primary diagnosis that alters the diagnostic and treatment recommendations resulting from a secondary disability. It biases school psychologists' diagnostic and treatment ratings of behaviorally disordered learners with a primary diagnosis of learning disabilities or profound deafness. This article demonstrates that school psychologists may provide different diagnostic ratings as a consequence of the primary diagnosis of profound deafness. School psychologists in this study were also less likely to provide therapeutic interventions, more likely to recommend general curriculum interventions (e.g., vocational and academic training), and less likely to recommend a change in the educational program for deaf students as a consequence of the behavioral reaction. Professional experience in working with deaf learners did not appear to be an intervening variable.
doi_str_mv 10.1353/aad.2012.0832
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source Jstor Complete Legacy; MEDLINE; Periodicals Index Online
subjects Academic advising
Adolescent
Aural learning
Deafness
Deafness - complications
Educational psychology
Female
Hearing loss
Humans
Learning disabilities
Mental Disorders - complications
Mental Disorders - diagnosis
Psychology
Psychometrics
Questionnaires
Recommendations
Vocational education
title Diagnostic Overshadowing Among School Psychologists Working with Hearing-Impaired Learners
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