Sign language as a communication prosthesis with language-impaired children
Identifieur interne : 001A00 ( Main/Exploration ); précédent : 001999; suivant : 001A01Sign language as a communication prosthesis with language-impaired children
Auteurs : M. Mary Konstantareas [Canada]Source :
- Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders [ 0162-3257 ] ; 1984-03-01.
Abstract
Abstract: Many language-impaired children rely on telegraphic speech for expression. Functors such as prepositions and pronouns are mostly absent from their utterances. In an experimental analogue to clinical work, 14 3- to 11-year-old children with various levels of language impairment were exposed to drawings portraying a single scene. A meaningful sentence including either a pronoun or a preposition, which the children were not spontaneously using at pretesting, was associated with each drawing. Training the children to use the functors followed one of two approaches. The experimenter either vocalized the functor, or she vocalized and signed it. Results revealed that, for both functor acquisition and functor recall, speech and sign training was superior to speech training. Type of functor trained was also important, with prepositions faring better than pronouns. Reasons for this speech facilitation through signs, and issues related to implementation, are discussed.
Url:
DOI: 10.1007/BF02408552
Affiliations:
Links toward previous steps (curation, corpus...)
- to stream Istex, to step Corpus: 002257
- to stream Istex, to step Curation: 001992
- to stream Istex, to step Checkpoint: 001447
- to stream Main, to step Merge: 001A33
- to stream Main, to step Curation: 001A00
Le document en format XML
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<front><div type="abstract" xml:lang="en">Abstract: Many language-impaired children rely on telegraphic speech for expression. Functors such as prepositions and pronouns are mostly absent from their utterances. In an experimental analogue to clinical work, 14 3- to 11-year-old children with various levels of language impairment were exposed to drawings portraying a single scene. A meaningful sentence including either a pronoun or a preposition, which the children were not spontaneously using at pretesting, was associated with each drawing. Training the children to use the functors followed one of two approaches. The experimenter either vocalized the functor, or she vocalized and signed it. Results revealed that, for both functor acquisition and functor recall, speech and sign training was superior to speech training. Type of functor trained was also important, with prepositions faring better than pronouns. Reasons for this speech facilitation through signs, and issues related to implementation, are discussed.</div>
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