Academic Trajectories of College Students with and without ADHD: Predictors of Four-Year Outcomes

Authored by tandfonline.com and submitted by AlooBadam

Objective: Completing a college degree is associated with success in employment, financial earnings, and life satisfaction. Mental health difficulties, including attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), can compromise degree completion.

Method: We examined 4-year academic performance trajectories of 201 college students with ADHD (97 receiving medication [ADHD-Med], 104 not receiving medication [ADHD-NoMed]) relative to 205 non-ADHD Comparison students. Demographic (e.g., sex, race/ethnicity), psychological (e.g., self-reported depression and anxiety symptoms), and service-related (e.g., receipt of academic support) variables were included as predictors of intercept (i.e., Year 1 performance) and slope (yearly change) of semester GPA, progress toward graduation, and self-reported study skill strategies.

Results: College students with ADHD obtained significantly lower GPAs (Hedge’s g = −0.46 and −0.63) and reported less frequent use of study skills strategies (Hedge’s g range from −1.00 to −2.28) than Comparison students. Significantly more Comparison students (59.1%) persisted through eight semesters relative to ADHD-NoMed students (49%). Multiple variables predicted outcomes with parent education, fewer depressive symptoms, better executive functioning, and receipt of high school Section 504 accommodations and college academic support services among the strongest predictors.

Conclusions: Findings suggest support services for students with ADHD should begin prior to college matriculation and focus on improving executive functioning skills and depressive symptoms to increase chances of academic success.

s8nSAX on June 18th, 2021 at 02:29 UTC »

It is like they just found out about adhd or something.

Azurehour on June 18th, 2021 at 02:06 UTC »

If anyone has some study tips for adhd students reading this, please share.

One thing that helps me to break it down into chunks. Dont think of it as 8 chapters to read this week. Think of it as 10 pages to read this morning.

7 page paper due at the end of the week? 1 page paper due each day. Helps me but still looking for more advice

SigKapEA752 on June 18th, 2021 at 00:25 UTC »

I did fine in undergrad because I went to a small school. Classes were small, I got lots of attention and my professors were often available to me. My masters degree CRUSHED ME. Bigger school, very hands off approach, lots of "listen to me talk," no feedback....the difference was huge.