Utility of brief teacher rating scales to identify children with educational problems: experience with an Australian sample

The study aimed to determine the utility of teacher ratings of children's behaviour, oral language, and literacy skills in identifying children with educational problems, and to examine the relationship between behaviour, oral language, and literacy skills. Teacher ratings were obtained for a c...

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Main Authors: Fletcher, J, Tannock, R, Bishop, D
Other Authors: Australian Psychological Society
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Taylor and Francis 2001
Subjects:
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author Fletcher, J
Tannock, R
Bishop, D
author2 Australian Psychological Society
author_facet Australian Psychological Society
Fletcher, J
Tannock, R
Bishop, D
author_sort Fletcher, J
collection OXFORD
description The study aimed to determine the utility of teacher ratings of children's behaviour, oral language, and literacy skills in identifying children with educational problems, and to examine the relationship between behaviour, oral language, and literacy skills. Teacher ratings were obtained for a cohort of Year 2 pupils (N = 129, mean age = 7.3 years, SD = .33) from five schools in Western Australia, using three brief screening questionnaires. To determine the sensitivity and specificity of the screening instruments in identifying children with educational problems as determined by psychometric criteria, direct psychometric assessment of oral language, vocabulary, reading, and spelling was conducted for a subset of the children. Teacher ratings of language, literacy, and behaviour correlated significantly with the standardised test scores. The screening instruments for language and literacy had reasonable sensitivity (74%) and specificity (92%), but a fairly high rate of false negatives (26%) and relatively poor positive predictive power (.53) for identifying children with problems in language and/or literacy. The prevalence of marked behaviour problems in this Australian sample of school children (9.6%) was comparable to that found in previous studies. Brief teacher-based screening instruments appear to have the potential to provide an economical and effective approach for identifying children at risk for educational problems, but the current instruments lacked adequate precision. The marked overlap between educational and behavioural problems in young children has important implications for prevention, identification, and intervention policies.
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spelling oxford-uuid:0214d61e-b058-4f97-9174-fb7143cafcef2022-03-26T08:38:30ZUtility of brief teacher rating scales to identify children with educational problems: experience with an Australian sampleJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:0214d61e-b058-4f97-9174-fb7143cafcefExperimental psychologyPsychologyEnglishOxford University Research Archive - ValetTaylor and Francis2001Fletcher, JTannock, RBishop, DAustralian Psychological SocietyThe study aimed to determine the utility of teacher ratings of children's behaviour, oral language, and literacy skills in identifying children with educational problems, and to examine the relationship between behaviour, oral language, and literacy skills. Teacher ratings were obtained for a cohort of Year 2 pupils (N = 129, mean age = 7.3 years, SD = .33) from five schools in Western Australia, using three brief screening questionnaires. To determine the sensitivity and specificity of the screening instruments in identifying children with educational problems as determined by psychometric criteria, direct psychometric assessment of oral language, vocabulary, reading, and spelling was conducted for a subset of the children. Teacher ratings of language, literacy, and behaviour correlated significantly with the standardised test scores. The screening instruments for language and literacy had reasonable sensitivity (74%) and specificity (92%), but a fairly high rate of false negatives (26%) and relatively poor positive predictive power (.53) for identifying children with problems in language and/or literacy. The prevalence of marked behaviour problems in this Australian sample of school children (9.6%) was comparable to that found in previous studies. Brief teacher-based screening instruments appear to have the potential to provide an economical and effective approach for identifying children at risk for educational problems, but the current instruments lacked adequate precision. The marked overlap between educational and behavioural problems in young children has important implications for prevention, identification, and intervention policies.
spellingShingle Experimental psychology
Psychology
Fletcher, J
Tannock, R
Bishop, D
Utility of brief teacher rating scales to identify children with educational problems: experience with an Australian sample
title Utility of brief teacher rating scales to identify children with educational problems: experience with an Australian sample
title_full Utility of brief teacher rating scales to identify children with educational problems: experience with an Australian sample
title_fullStr Utility of brief teacher rating scales to identify children with educational problems: experience with an Australian sample
title_full_unstemmed Utility of brief teacher rating scales to identify children with educational problems: experience with an Australian sample
title_short Utility of brief teacher rating scales to identify children with educational problems: experience with an Australian sample
title_sort utility of brief teacher rating scales to identify children with educational problems experience with an australian sample
topic Experimental psychology
Psychology
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