“…Cultural factors may also result in some minority groups attributing their children's perceived lower academic behavioral functioning to systemic prejudice or other non-biological explanations (Danesco, 1997; Yeh, Forness, Ho, McCabe, & Hough, 2004; Yeh, Hough, McCabe, Lau, & Garland, 2004). The stigma associated with disability identification may further reduce a racial, ethnic, or language minority family's willingness to have their child identified as disabled (Hervey-Jumper, Dougan, & Franco, 2008; O'Hara, 2003; Zuckerman et al, 2014), particularly for conditions considered highly stigmatizing (e.g., intellectually disabled). Minority families may experience fewer interactions with pediatricians and other health professionals who often diagnose disorders (e.g., autism) during early childhood (Palfrey, Singer, Walker, & Butler, 1987).…”