| Literature DB >> 24449604 |
Xin Wei1, Elizabeth R A Christiano2, Jennifer W Yu2, Mary Wagner2, Donna Spiker2.
Abstract
This study examined the reading and math achievement profiles and longitudinal growth trajectories of a nationally representative sample of children ages 6 through 9 with an autism spectrum disorder. Four distinct achievement profiles were identified: higher-achieving (39%), hyperlexia (9%), hypercalculia (20%) and lower-achieving (32%). Children with hypercalculia and lower-achieving profiles were more likely to be from low socioeconomic families and had lower functional cognitive skills than the higher-achieving profile. All four profiles lost ground in passage comprehension over time. Slower improvement occurred for the higher-achieving group on letter-word identification, the hyperlexia group on conversation abilities and the hypercalculia group on calculation and functional cognitive skills relative to the lower-achieving group.Entities:
Keywords: Hierarchical Linear Modeling; academic achievement; autism; cluster analysis; conversation ability; functional skills; health; social skills
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24449604 DOI: 10.1177/1362361313516549
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Autism ISSN: 1362-3613