Title of article :
Written Language as a Window in to Residual Language Deficits: A Study of Children With Persistent and Residual Speech and Language Impairments
Author/Authors :
Bishop، نويسنده , , Dorothy V.M. and Clarkson، نويسنده , , Barbara، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages :
23
From page :
215
To page :
237
Abstract :
Previous work has suggested that, because writing is a late-acquired and complex skill, it may be a particularly sensitive index of language difficulties in children. Evidence in support of this view was obtained in a study contrasting 161 normally-developing control children aged from 7.5 to 13 years with 75 twin children of the same age who either had specific speech-language impairments, or were co-twins of affected children. Written narratives were elicited from children using a sequence of five photographs depicting a simple story, and were analysed for grammatical complexity and accuracy, intelligibility, and semantic content. Only 42 of the twins could spell well enough to attempt the narrative task. Some co-twins of affected children had deficits in written language, despite normal performance on oral language tests. Most children with language impairments were poor at writing, with particularly marked deficits on a measure of spelling and punctuation. Children with language impairments made a relatively high proportion of phonologically inaccurate spelling errors when compared with younger children at a similar vocabulary level. Those who did poorly on a nonword repetition test were especially likely to have poor written language. However, four children with pure speech difficulties produced age-appropriate written narratives.
Keywords :
WRITING , Speech , Spelling , specific language impairment
Journal title :
Cortex
Serial Year :
2003
Journal title :
Cortex
Record number :
2299142
Link To Document :
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