Paths to postsecondary education enrollment among adolescents with and without childhood attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): A longitudinal analysis of symptom and academic trajectories Article

Di Lonardo Burr, SM, LeFevre, JA, Arnold, LE et al. (2022). Paths to postsecondary education enrollment among adolescents with and without childhood attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD): A longitudinal analysis of symptom and academic trajectories . CHILD DEVELOPMENT, 93(5), e563-e580. 10.1111/cdev.13807

cited authors

  • Di Lonardo Burr, SM; LeFevre, JA; Arnold, LE; Epstein, JN; Hinshaw, SP; Molina, BSG; Hechtman, L; Hoza, B; Jensen, PS; Vitiello, B; Pelham, WE; Howard, AL

abstract

  • We examined developmental trajectories of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) symptoms, standardized achievement, and school performance for adolescents with and without ADHD who did and did not enroll in postsecondary education (PSE; N = 749; 79% boys; 63% White, 17% non-Hispanic Black, 10% Hispanic, and 10% other ethnicities). In a multisite study (recruitment based in New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, California, and Quebec), participants were originally enrolled between 1994 and 1998 at ages 7 to 9.9 and followed up through 2012 (Mage = 25 at final follow-up). Adolescents who eventually enrolled in PSE had less severe symptoms, but differences were modest and trajectories were similar over time. For all adolescents, standardized achievement trajectories declined up to two thirds of a standard deviation from ages 9 to 17. By the end of high school, the average GPA of adolescents with ADHD was three quarters of a point higher for those who eventually enrolled in PSE compared to those who did not. Overall, school performance mattered more than academic achievement for understanding eventual enrollment of adolescents with ADHD.

publication date

  • September 1, 2022

published in

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

start page

  • e563

end page

  • e580

volume

  • 93

issue

  • 5