Literature DB >> 10757690

An assessment battery for identifying language impairment in African American children.

H K Craig1, J A Washington.   

Abstract

This investigation compares the performances of 24 African American children, diagnosed as language impaired (LI) and receiving school-based language therapy, to 2 groups of typically developing peers (N = 48) on 5 traditional types of language assessment measures. Three of the measures were derived from child-centered free play language sample analyses and included average length of communication units (MLCU), frequencies of complex syntax, and numbers of different words. Two of the measures examined language comprehension and included responses to requests for information in the form of Wh-questions and responses to probes of active and passive sentence constructions. The performances of the group of children with language impairments were significantly lower on each measure than that of chronological age matched African American children who were typically developing. Sensitivity and specificity of the battery appeared excellent. The findings are discussed in terms of the potential of these informal language measures to contribute to a culturally fair assessment protocol for young African American children.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10757690     DOI: 10.1044/jslhr.4302.366

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Speech Lang Hear Res        ISSN: 1092-4388            Impact factor:   2.297


  17 in total

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7.  Passive participle marking by African American English-speaking children reared in poverty.

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8.  Psychometric Analysis of the Diagnostic Evaluation of Language Variation Assessment.

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9.  Empirically derived combinations of tools and clinical cutoffs: an illustrative case with a sample of culturally/linguistically diverse children.

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10.  Development of an expressive language sampling procedure in fragile X syndrome: a pilot study.

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