Disabilities and Degrees: Identifying Health Impairments that Predict Lower Chances of College Enrollment and Graduation in a Nationally Representative Sample

残疾与学位:在具有全国代表性的样本中识别预测大学入学和毕业几率较低的健康障碍

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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Community colleges have increased post-secondary educational access for youth, including individuals with disabilities, but completion rates remain low. This study tests the hypothesis that health conditions that reduce social integration predict lower educational attainment among community college students. METHODS: Our sample from the nationally representative Add Health data (1995, 2001, 2008) comprised respondents in 2001 whose highest degree was a high school diploma (n=9909), focusing on subsamples of students enrolled in 2-year colleges and 4-year colleges (n=1494, n=2721). For each of 57 health conditions in 2001, we estimated the relative risk of earning certificate, associates degree (AA), or bachelors degree (BA) in 2008, controlling for pre-college factors, including high school grades, test scores, parents' household income, and full-time enrollment. RESULTS: Health conditions associated with social stigma predicted lower educational attainment among community college students, including stuttering, being overweight, and health that restricts engaging in vigorous sports. A broader range of health conditions predicted lower educational attainment among 4-year college students, including restrictions on climbing one and several flights of stairs and walking one and several blocks. CONCLUSIONS: Stigmatized health conditions may disproportionately reduce educational attainment by impacting students' social integration in community college. Improved awareness may reduce the impact of unconscious stigma. Until four-year colleges improve accommodations, students with activity restrictions may benefit by earning degrees at community college before transferring to four-year institutions.

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