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Review

A systematic review of post-secondary transition interventions for youth with disabilities

, , , , &
Pages 2492-2505 | Received 04 Jan 2018, Accepted 24 Apr 2018, Published online: 04 May 2018
 

Abstract

Purpose: Youth with disabilities have lower rates of enrollment and completion of post-secondary education compared with youth without disabilities. The objective of this systematic review is to understand the best practices and components of post-secondary transition programs for youth with disabilities.

Method: Systematic searches of six international databases identified 18 studies meeting our inclusion criteria (youth with a disability, aged 15–30; focusing on post-secondary education program or intervention, published from 1997 to 2017). These studies were analyzed with respect to the characteristics of the participants, methodology, results, and quality of the evidence.

Results: Among the 18 studies, 2385 participants (aged 13–28, mean 17.7 years) were represented across three countries (US, Canada, and Australia). Although the outcomes of the post-secondary transition programs varied across the studies, all of them reported an improvement in at least one of the following: college enrollment, self-determination, self-confidence, social and vocational self-efficacy, autonomy, social support, career exploration, and transition skills. The post-secondary transition programs varied in duration, length, number of sessions, and delivery format which included curriculum-based, online, immersive residential experience, mentoring, simulation, self-directed, technology-based, and multi-component.

Conclusions: Our findings highlight that post-secondary transition programs have the potential to improve self-determination, transition skills, and post-secondary outcomes among youth with disabilities.

    Implications for rehabilitation

  • Post-secondary education interventions have a beneficial influence on post-secondary and related transition outcomes in youth with disabilities.

  • Clinicians and educators should consider having multiple components, involving several sessions that include a curriculum, immersive college residential experience, mentoring, and/or simulations in their interventions for optimum program outcomes.

  • More research is needed to explore the types of interventions that work best for whom and the optimal age (including exploring the socio-demographic characteristics), setting, and delivery format.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to thank the staff, students, and volunteers in the TRAIL lab who contributed to this manuscript.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors. The first author holds a career award from the Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation.

Additional information

Funding

This study was supported by Ministry of Research, Innovation and Science.

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