Teachers' Views of the Treatability of Children's School Adjustment Problems'
- 1 October 1977
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in The Journal of Special Education
- Vol. 11 (3), 275-280
- https://doi.org/10.1177/002246697701100303
Abstract
One-hundred thirty-four primary grade teachers rated each of nine hypothetical referrals, depicting three predominant types of school adjustment problems (acting-out, shy-anxious, learning), on four dimensions: (a) appropriateness of referring the child to the school's mental health services, (b) ease or difficulty for a mental health person to work with such a child, (c) how much a mental health person would enjoy working with the child, and (d) a treatment-prognosis estimate. Shy-anxious children generally received the most positive ratings. Teacher judgments were compared to prior, similar judgments made by mental health personnel. The latter gave significantly higher appropriateness ratings, indicated that the children would be significantly less difficult and more enjoyable to work with, and judged prognosis to be more favorable. An important deviation from this pattern of findings is considered.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Normative and parametric analyses of school maladjustmentAmerican Journal of Community Psychology, 1975
- Teachers' and Clinicians' Attitudes toward the Behavior Problems of Children: A ReappraisalChild Development, 1959