Literature DB >> 17364627

Analysis of oral narratives of children who stutter and their fluent peers: kindergarten through second grade.

Amit Bajaj1.   

Abstract

Measures of language sample length (in c-units) and morphological, syntactic, and narrative abilities were obtained from oral narrative transcripts of 22 children who stutter and 22 children who do not stutter; participants attended kindergarten, first, and second grades. A two-way MANOVA yielded significant main effects for grade, with significant differences on some measures evidenced between participants in kindergarten and second grades. No significant differences between groups or group-grade interaction effects on the measures were obtained. Grade-wise comparisons (through t-tests) indicated that the performance of children who stutter did not differ significantly from their typically fluent peers on all dependent measures; however, kindergarten children who stutter obtained the most discrepant (lower) scores than their grade-matched fluent peers on the Narrative Scoring Scheme measure, with group differences approaching statistical significance on this measure. The findings suggest that children who do and do not stutter evidence similar expressive language abilities, even as subgroups of children who stutter may lag behind their grade-matched fluent peers in particular language domains.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17364627     DOI: 10.1080/02699200601075896

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Clin Linguist Phon        ISSN: 0269-9206            Impact factor:   1.346


  3 in total

1.  The Home Literacy Environment and the English Narrative Development of Spanish-English Bilingual Children.

Authors:  Dana Bitetti; Carol Scheffner Hammer
Journal:  J Speech Lang Hear Res       Date:  2016-10-01       Impact factor: 2.297

2.  The Narrative Macrostructure Production of Spanish-English Bilingual Preschoolers: Within-and Cross-Language Relations.

Authors:  Dana Bitetti; Carol Scheffner Hammer; Lisa M López
Journal:  Appl Psycholinguist       Date:  2019-10-15

3.  The effect of methylphenidate-OROS<sup>®</sup> on the narrative ability of children with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder.

Authors:  Tessa L Rausch; Diane L Kendall; Sara T Kover; Elizabeth M Louw; Ursula L Zsilavecz; Anita Van der Merwe
Journal:  S Afr J Commun Disord       Date:  2017-02-27
  3 in total

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