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Does the learner profiler successfully screen for neurodiversity and predict neuropsychological outcomes in high school learners?

There has been a push for improved inclusive education for learners with learning difficulties and disabilities in SA due to the long-lasting detrimental consequences learning difficulties and disabilities have on learners' academic achievement and future outcomes. The importance of the screening an...

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Main Author: Antvorskov, Khayreyah
Other Authors: Schrieff, Leigh
Format: Thesis
Language:Eng
Published: Department of Psychology 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Antvorskov, Khayreyah
author2 Schrieff, Leigh
author_browse Antvorskov, Khayreyah
Schrieff, Leigh
author_facet Schrieff, Leigh
Antvorskov, Khayreyah
author_sort Antvorskov, Khayreyah
collection Thesis
description There has been a push for improved inclusive education for learners with learning difficulties and disabilities in SA due to the long-lasting detrimental consequences learning difficulties and disabilities have on learners' academic achievement and future outcomes. The importance of the screening and identification of learning difficulties and disabilities has been highlighted as the current screening policy in SA presents several issues and formal neuropsychological tests are time-consuming, costly, require expertise in administration, and lack language diversity. Therefore, computerized assessments, such as the Learner Profiler, have been put forward as a useful supportive tool to aid the screening for, and identification of, learning difficulties and disabilities. The current study investigated if the Learner Profiler, a computerized assessment tool, could successfully predict working memory, numeracy and literacy outcomes from formal neuropsychological pen and paper tests in a sample of high school learners. Participants were recruited from English-medium Cape Town high schools (N= 51). Participants first completed the Learner Profiler working memory, literacy and numeracy modules (stage 1) and then were later administered the KTEA-3 and the Working Memory Index from the WISC-IV (stage 2). It was found that the working memory outcomes from the Learner Profiler significantly predicted the overall Working Memory Index outcomes (p < .001) but not outcomes from the Digit Span Backwards and Letter-number Sequencing individual subtests (p > .05). The numeracy outcomes from the Learner Profiler did not significantly predict the outcomes from the numeracy neuropsychological pen and paper tests (p > .05). However, excluding one reading subtest (p >.05), the literacy outcomes from the Learner Profiler significantly predicted the literacy outcomes from the KTEA-3 (p
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language Eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:33.643Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2024
publishDateRange 2024
publishDateSort 2024
publisher Department of Psychology
publisherStr Department of Psychology
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/40167 Does the learner profiler successfully screen for neurodiversity and predict neuropsychological outcomes in high school learners? Antvorskov, Khayreyah Schrieff, Leigh Psychology There has been a push for improved inclusive education for learners with learning difficulties and disabilities in SA due to the long-lasting detrimental consequences learning difficulties and disabilities have on learners' academic achievement and future outcomes. The importance of the screening and identification of learning difficulties and disabilities has been highlighted as the current screening policy in SA presents several issues and formal neuropsychological tests are time-consuming, costly, require expertise in administration, and lack language diversity. Therefore, computerized assessments, such as the Learner Profiler, have been put forward as a useful supportive tool to aid the screening for, and identification of, learning difficulties and disabilities. The current study investigated if the Learner Profiler, a computerized assessment tool, could successfully predict working memory, numeracy and literacy outcomes from formal neuropsychological pen and paper tests in a sample of high school learners. Participants were recruited from English-medium Cape Town high schools (N= 51). Participants first completed the Learner Profiler working memory, literacy and numeracy modules (stage 1) and then were later administered the KTEA-3 and the Working Memory Index from the WISC-IV (stage 2). It was found that the working memory outcomes from the Learner Profiler significantly predicted the overall Working Memory Index outcomes (p < .001) but not outcomes from the Digit Span Backwards and Letter-number Sequencing individual subtests (p > .05). The numeracy outcomes from the Learner Profiler did not significantly predict the outcomes from the numeracy neuropsychological pen and paper tests (p > .05). However, excluding one reading subtest (p >.05), the literacy outcomes from the Learner Profiler significantly predicted the literacy outcomes from the KTEA-3 (p 2024-07-02T10:08:16Z 2024-07-02T10:08:16Z 2024 2024-06-19T12:54:54Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40167 Eng application/pdf Department of Psychology Faculty of Humanities
spellingShingle Psychology
Antvorskov, Khayreyah
Does the learner profiler successfully screen for neurodiversity and predict neuropsychological outcomes in high school learners?
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Does the learner profiler successfully screen for neurodiversity and predict neuropsychological outcomes in high school learners?
title_full Does the learner profiler successfully screen for neurodiversity and predict neuropsychological outcomes in high school learners?
title_fullStr Does the learner profiler successfully screen for neurodiversity and predict neuropsychological outcomes in high school learners?
title_full_unstemmed Does the learner profiler successfully screen for neurodiversity and predict neuropsychological outcomes in high school learners?
title_short Does the learner profiler successfully screen for neurodiversity and predict neuropsychological outcomes in high school learners?
title_sort does the learner profiler successfully screen for neurodiversity and predict neuropsychological outcomes in high school learners
topic Psychology
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/40167
work_keys_str_mv AT antvorskovkhayreyah doesthelearnerprofilersuccessfullyscreenforneurodiversityandpredictneuropsychologicaloutcomesinhighschoollearners