Problems of language and communication in children; Identification and intervention
Author
Summary, in English
The results from study I show that receptive skills and symbolic play at 18 months of age are significantly associated with language ability three years later. Study II, in which language skills in children with ADHD were explored, indicates that language ability plays an important role for all other aspects of children's development and behaviour, with the exception of motor skills. Use of language and language comprehension caused these children many more problems than structural aspects of language production. Furthermore, reading and writing problems were found to be very frequent. Study III shows that dialogues between children with SLI and TLD age peers are characterized by more responsiveness and topic coherence than dialogues between children with SLI and TLD language peers. However, the children with SLI were more assertive, i.e., introduced more topics, in dialogues with language peers. Study IV indicates that the children with SLI talked more and had a higher mean length of utterance (MLU) in the free conversational context, whereas the individually selected grammatical targets occurred more often in the training context. In the conversational context the SLPs linked, i.e., attended, more to the child's focus and gave more feedback, while in the training context the individually selected grammatical targets occurred more often and the children were more frequently asked to follow instructions.
The results have important clinical implications. First; screening procedures at Child Health Care (CHC) centres should be recommended to focus on receptive language skills and play behaviour, and not only on size of vocabulary at 18 months of age. Second; language skills, in particular language comprehension, language use and literacy skills were found to cause children with ADHD problems, and should therefore be assessed. Third; it is of great value for children with SLI to be in mixed groups with peers representing different ages and language levels, and to avoid the risk of not being selected as playmates. Fourth; increased awareness of how interactional style and elicitation strategies influence the developing language skills in children with SLI can be used in intervention planning, depending on the goals of the specific intervention procedures for the individual child.
Department/s
Publishing year
2007
Language
English
Publication/Series
Lund University Faculty of Medicine Doctoral Dissertation Series
Volume
14
Document type
Dissertation
Publisher
Department of Logopedics, Phoniatrics and Audiology, Clinical Sciences, Lund University
Topic
- Other Medical Sciences not elsewhere specified
- Otorhinolaryngology
Keywords
- auditive system and speech
- Otorinolaryngologi
- audiology
- Medicin (människa och djur)
- Otorhinolaryngology
- Interaction
- Medicine (human and vertebrates)
- Intervention
- Screening
- Language and communication problems
- audiologi
- hörsel- och talorganen
- ADHD
- Identification
Status
Published
Supervisor
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1652-8220
- ISBN: 91-85559-83-0
Defence date
23 February 2007
Defence time
10:15
Defence place
Hörsalen, Språk- och litteraturcentrum, Helgonabacken 12, Lund
Opponent
- Bente Eriksen Hagtvet (Professor)