Publication | Closed Access
Predictors of early high school dropout: A test of five theories.
731
Citations
55
References
2000
Year
Educational OutcomesEducational AttainmentEducational PsychologyHigh SchoolEducationSocial StratificationPsychologySocial SciencesElementary EducationStudent RetentionEducational DisadvantageSchool FunctioningStudent SuccessEducational StatisticsDisadvantaged BackgroundChild DevelopmentSecondary EducationSociologySchool DropoutAcademic Achievement
This study compared the adequacy of 5 theories to predict dropping out of high school before the 10th grade. These theories include full mediation by academic achievement and direct effects related to general deviance, deviant affiliation, family socialization, and structural strains. Nested latent variable models were used to test these theories on prospective data from an ethnically diverse urban sample. Poor academic achievement mediated the effect of all independent factors on school dropout, although general deviance, bonding to antisocial peers, and socioeconomic status also retained direct effects on dropping out. Therefore, none of the theories tested was fully adequate to explain the data, although partial support was obtained for each theory. Implications for prevention of early high school dropout are discussed.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1