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Criminal Offending and Learning Disabilities in New Zealand Youth Does Reading Comprehension Predict Recidivism?

NCJ Number
245086
Journal
Crime and Delinquency Volume: 59 Issue: 8 Dated: December 2013 Pages: 1263-1286
Author(s)
Julia J. Rucklidge; Anthony P. McLean; Paula Bateup
Date Published
December 2013
Length
24 pages
Annotation

This study examined two youth prison sites participate in a prospective study examining criminal offending and learning disabilities (LD), completing measures of estimated IQ, attention, reading, and mathematical and oral language abilities.

Abstract

Sixty youth (16-19 years) from 2 youth prison sites participate in a prospective study examining criminal offending and learning disabilities (LD), completing measures of estimated IQ, attention, reading, and mathematical and oral language abilities. Prevalence rates of LDs exceed those of international studies, with 91.67 percent of the offenders showing significant difficulties in at least one area of achievement (defined as 1 SD or more below the normative mean), the mean reading comprehension score falling at the 4th percentile. Four years post assessment, recidivism rates among released youth (n = 51) are investigated. After the investigators control for other known risk factors (including delinquency and estimated IQ), reading comprehension predicts future offending across measures, capturing rate, seriousness, and persistence of offending post release. Abstract published by arrangement with Sage Journals.