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Delinquency and learning disabilities: Evidence for compensatory behaviors and adaptation
Authors:Barry F Perlmutter
Institution:(1) Department of Family Studies and Home Economics, Texas Christian University, P. O. Box 32869, 76129 Fort Worth, Texas
Abstract:There has been a great deal of debate as to whether or not there is a direct relationship between learning disabilities and delinquent behavior. While the relationship was well established for adjudicated youth, it was more uncertain for adolescents not actively involved with the juvenile justice system. There are indications, however, that the relationship is more complex, with learning disabled (LD) adolescents more likely to develop severe delinquent behaviors than are their nondisabled peers, but unlikely to exhibit a middle ground between delinquent and nondelinquent behavior. It is hypothesized that this difference is due to the ability of most LD children and adolescents to adapt through developing skills that allow them to compensate for their handicapping conditions. Implications for future research are discussed.Partial funding for research support provided by Texas Christian University Research Fund.This article was written by a member of the editorial board of theJournal of Youth and Adolescence as a response to the article by Daniel B. Pickar and Christopher D. Tori, entitled ldquoThe Learning Disabled Adolescent: Eriksonian Psychological Development, Self-Concept, and Delinquent Behaviorrdquo, which appeared in Volume 15, Number 5. —Daniel Offer, M. D., Editor-in-Chief.Received Ph. D. in personality and abnormal psychology at Northwestern University. Current research interests include social development and social skills training of both learning disabled and nondisabled adolescents.
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