Teacher and parent ratings of emotional and behavioural disorders were made for
children aged 5-15 years in the strictly orthodox Jewish community in North
London, on the Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire (SDQ; Goodman, 1997). We
obtained 369 sets of teacher ratings and 226 parent ratings. Our parent ratings
generally reflected less disturbance than did parent ratings in the national
samples reported by Meltzer and colleagues (Meltzer, Gatward, Corbin, Goodman,
& Ford, 2003; Meltzer, Gatward, Goodman, & Ford, 2000). Our
teacher ratings reflected similar levels of disturbance to teacher ratings in
the national sample, except that the older boys in this sample were rated as
more disturbed by their teachers. Teacher ratings of disturbance were associated
with perceived Special Educational Needs (SENs), and it was noted that statutory
remedial help was said to be needed particularly urgently for older boys. In
this community there is negligible statutory educational funding and remedial
support for older boys is said to be particularly under-resourced. The strictly
orthodox Jewish community is characterized by large family size and high levels
of economic deprivation, and it might be expected that there would be high
levels of associated emotional and behavioural disorders. The relatively low
levels of behaviour disturbance found were suggested to be the result of
moderating factors such as high levels of family cohesion, social support and religiosity.