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Executive Dysfunction and Anxiety in Adolescent Females with ADHD: A Study of Arab Israeli Students

Rafat Ghanamah () and Julnar Khaldi-Mreh
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Rafat Ghanamah: Special Education Department, Sakhnin College for Teacher Education, Sakhnin 3081000, Israel
Julnar Khaldi-Mreh: Special Education Department, Sakhnin College for Teacher Education, Sakhnin 3081000, Israel

Disabilities, 2025, vol. 5, issue 4, 1-20

Abstract: This study examined the relationships between anxiety and executive functioning in Arab Israeli female adolescents diagnosed with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), compared to their typically developing peers. The aim was to explore differences in emotional and metacognitive executive functions, as well as how anxiety correlates with these cognitive domains within a culturally specific and gender-sensitive population. Eighty adolescent girls aged 15–18 (40 with ADHD and 40 controls) completed self-report measures assessing anxiety and executive functions using the BRIEF-SR and State-Trait Anxiety Inventory. No significant group differences were found in behavioral aspects of executive functions (inhibition, shifting, emotional control, and monitoring) or in overall anxiety levels. However, the ADHD group demonstrated significantly greater difficulties in all metacognitive executive function domains—including working memory, planning, organization, and task completion—as well as higher scores on the Metacognitive Index and Global Executive Composite. Correlational analyses revealed that anxiety was significantly associated with both behavioral and metacognitive executive dysfunction in the control group. In the ADHD group, however, anxiety was only significantly related to behavioral regulation, not metacognitive functioning. These findings underscore the importance of metacognitive support in interventions for adolescent girls with ADHD. Culturally tailored educational strategies that target working memory, planning, and organizational skills may help improve academic performance and overall adaptive functioning in this underserved population.

Keywords: ADHD; executive functions; anxiety; Arab adolescents; behavioral regulation (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: I (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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