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Patterns in office referral data by grade, Race/Ethnicity, and gender

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Patterns in office referral data by grade, Race/Ethnicity, and gender
Abstract
Research supports that office referral data is useful in informing programmatic decisions and planning interventions such as Positive Behavior Supports (PBS). Knowledge of patterns of office referrals may facilitate development of interventions that target specific groups. This study examines patterns in office referrals within an urban district by gender, race/ ethnicity and grade. Findings reveal that there are differences by grade that appear to be related to developmental level, with more referrals for aggression in younger students (grades K-6), disrespectful behavior in middle school students (grades 7-8), and attendance problems in high school students. Gender differences in the rate and type of referrals were found, with significantly more referrals for boys' delinquent/aggressive behavior, which may relate to how schools define unacceptable behavior and the data collection method. Finally, there were significantly more referrals for African American/black students than Hispanic students, suggesting that schools consider racial differences when developing behavioral expectations.
Publication
Journal of Positive Behavior Interventions
Date
2010-01
Volume
12
Issue
1
Pages
44-54
Journal Abbr
J. Posit. Behav. Interventions
Citation Key
ISI:000273035800007
ISSN
1098-3007
Language
English
Extra
61 citations (Crossref) [2023-10-31] Citation Key: ISI:000273035800007 Citation Key Alias: lens.org/072-571-635-125-933 tex.unique-id: [object Object]
Citation
Kaufman, J. S., Jaser, S. S., Vaughan, E. L., Reynolds, J. S., Di Donato, J., Bernard, S. N., & Hernandez-Brereton, M. (2010). Patterns in office referral data by grade, Race/Ethnicity, and gender. Journal of Positive Behavior Interventions, 12(1), 44–54. https://doi.org/10.1177/1098300708329710