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Journal of Learning Disabilities
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A Sociological Perspective on Diagnosing Learning Difficulties

Carl J. Bognar, PhD

Carl J. Bognar was formerly an assistant professor at the Institute for Research in Human Abilities and at the School of Social Work at Memorial University of Newfoundland. He received his PhD degree in applied psychology from the University of Toronto. Address: Dr. Carl J. Bognar. Educational Research Institute of British Columbia. Suite 400, 515 West 10th Ave., Vancouver. B.C. Canada V5Z 4A8.

Wilfred B. W. Martin, PhD

Wilfred B. W. Martin is an associate professor at the Institute for Research in Human Abilities and in the Department of Educational Foundations at Memorial University of Newfoundland. He received his PhD degree in sociology of education at York University.

Using a symbolic interaction perspective, this study focuses on the extent of agreement between various parties involved in referring children with educational difficulties to a university clinic for psychoeducational assessment. Parent's perceptions, referral agent perceptions, and diagnostic reports were compared by means of a specially devised diagnostic classification system; data were gathered on 240 cases opened in one year in a university clinic. Findings suggest that parents are most likely to seek cutside help when they disagree with the interpretation of difficulties by the school; that referral agents (physicians, psychologists, and other professionals) are more likely to seek a second opinion when they agree with the opinions of parents, and that the diagnosis more often coincides with the opinion of referral agents than with parents or schools. These findings are interpreted in light of the problematic nature of the diagnostic process, and the process of working out of individual and collective identities in parent-teacher-referral agent interactions.

Journal of Learning Disabilities, Vol. 15, No. 6, 347-351 (1982)
DOI: 10.1177/002221948201500609


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