Home
Scholarly Works
The Intersectionality of Postsecondary Pathways:...
Journal article

The Intersectionality of Postsecondary Pathways: The Case of High School Students with Special Education Needs

Abstract

Using data from the Toronto District School Board, we examine the postsecondary pathways of students with special education needs (SEN). We consider both university and college pathways, employing multilevel multinomial logistic regressions, conceptualizing our findings within a life course and intersectionality framework. Our findings reveal that having SEN reduces the likelihood of confirming university, but increases the likelihood of college confirmation. We examine a set of known determinants of postsecondary education (PSE) pathways that were derived from the literature and employ exploratory statistical interactions to examine if the intersection of various traits differentially impacts upon the PSE trajectories of students with SEN. Our findings reveal that parental education, neighborhood wealth, race, and streaming impact on the postsecondary pathways of students with SEN in Toronto.

Authors

Robson KL; Anisef P; Brown RS; Parekh G

Journal

Canadian Review of Sociology/Revue canadienne de sociologie, Vol. 51, No. 3, pp. 193–215

Publisher

Wiley

Publication Date

January 1, 2014

DOI

10.1111/cars.12044

ISSN

1755-6171

Contact the Experts team