2004
DOI: 10.1525/sp.2004.51.4.569
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Academic Failure in Secondary School: The Inter-Related Role of Health Problems and Educational Context

Abstract: This study explores whether the interplay of health problems and school environment predicts academic failure, an individual event with consequences for the life course, as well as for society at large. This exploration proceeds in three steps: 1) we examine whether physical and mental health problems are an academic risk factor during secondary school; 2) we investigate the academic mechanisms underlying this risk status; and 3) we explore whether this risk status varies by school context. A series of logisti… Show more

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Cited by 151 publications
(125 citation statements)
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“…In particular, due to physical and mental health problems detected in some of the students such as anxiety, depression and sleep disorders [7,9], el AS may be a natural response for survival in the academic environment, which involves different factors such as academic overload, group activities, lack of technological resources and counseling [10]. …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, due to physical and mental health problems detected in some of the students such as anxiety, depression and sleep disorders [7,9], el AS may be a natural response for survival in the academic environment, which involves different factors such as academic overload, group activities, lack of technological resources and counseling [10]. …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Students with health impairments have worse academic performance in high school than students without health impairments (Fletcher, 2010;Merrell, 2001;Needham, Crosnoe, & Muller, 2004). A growing body of literature suggests that this trend continues in college.…”
Section: Author Manuscriptmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But if, as some researchers argue, status group factors exogenous to academic achievement-such as race, gender and social class-contribute to signals of degree progress and academic fit, then postsecondary institutions unjustly cool out lower status individuals who have the ability to succeed in college (Dougherty & Kienzl, 2006;Karabel, 1972;Pascarella, Wolniak, & Pierson, 2003). Studies have found that students with mental or physical impairments in high school have higher failure rates and take lower levels of coursework than their unimpaired peers, even net of academic ability (Needham, Crosnoe, & Muller, 2004;Shifrer, Callahan, & Muller, 2013). If students with health impairments who have similar levels of high school preparation and college academic experiences as their unimpaired peers still systematically perform worse than students without health impairments during the first year of college, then institutional processes and academic demands during the transition to college may disadvantage these students.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…LHB-leerlingen voelen zich naast minder veilig op school (Mooij et al, 2012) ook minder veilig in de klas, ze vinden het er minder fijn en gezellig, ervaren minder vaak steun van hun docent en hebben minder vaak het gevoel erbij te horen (Aerts et al, 2012;Bucx & Van Sman, 2014;Needham et al, 2004).…”
Section: Pesterijen Over De Seksuele Voorkeur Op School En Verminderdunclassified