The narrative abilities of a severely hard-of-hearing child

Telling a narrative is a complex task that requires the integration of two types of knowledge: cognitive knowledge of the real-world and linguistically transmitted sociocultural knowledge. Different narrative types require varying amounts of cognitive and linguistically transmitted sociocultural kno...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: McCullough, Carol H.
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2008
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1961
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-1961
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-19612018-01-05T17:30:32Z The narrative abilities of a severely hard-of-hearing child McCullough, Carol H. Telling a narrative is a complex task that requires the integration of two types of knowledge: cognitive knowledge of the real-world and linguistically transmitted sociocultural knowledge. Different narrative types require varying amounts of cognitive and linguistically transmitted sociocultural knowledge. It is of interest to find out if the structure of various narrative types is altered when language input is impaired in cases of congenital hearing loss, where it is expected that the acquisition of linguistically transmitted sociocultural knowledge will be delayed but cognitive knowledge will not. A 4-year-old severely hard-of-hearing child was asked to tell three different types of narratives: script narratives, personal narratives, and story narratives. The present study investigated whether or not there was a difference between the structure of this hard-of-hearing child's narratives and the structure of narratives reported in the existing literature on normal-hearing preschoolers. It was predicted that only narrative structures relying predominantly on linguistically transmitted sociocultural knowledge would be delayed in the hard-of-hearing child. It was found that the hard-of-hearing child had structurally similar script and personal narratives to those produced by age-matched normal-hearing children. However, contrary to the prediction, his story narratives were structurally more complete than those of age-matched normal-hearing preschoolers. These findings support the conclusion that only limited exposure to story narrative structure is needed in order to include components that require predominantly linguistically transmitted sociocultural knowledge. Medicine, Faculty of Audiology and Speech Sciences, School of Graduate 2008-09-15T18:56:42Z 2008-09-15T18:56:42Z 1993 1993-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1961 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. 4455359 bytes application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
description Telling a narrative is a complex task that requires the integration of two types of knowledge: cognitive knowledge of the real-world and linguistically transmitted sociocultural knowledge. Different narrative types require varying amounts of cognitive and linguistically transmitted sociocultural knowledge. It is of interest to find out if the structure of various narrative types is altered when language input is impaired in cases of congenital hearing loss, where it is expected that the acquisition of linguistically transmitted sociocultural knowledge will be delayed but cognitive knowledge will not. A 4-year-old severely hard-of-hearing child was asked to tell three different types of narratives: script narratives, personal narratives, and story narratives. The present study investigated whether or not there was a difference between the structure of this hard-of-hearing child's narratives and the structure of narratives reported in the existing literature on normal-hearing preschoolers. It was predicted that only narrative structures relying predominantly on linguistically transmitted sociocultural knowledge would be delayed in the hard-of-hearing child. It was found that the hard-of-hearing child had structurally similar script and personal narratives to those produced by age-matched normal-hearing children. However, contrary to the prediction, his story narratives were structurally more complete than those of age-matched normal-hearing preschoolers. These findings support the conclusion that only limited exposure to story narrative structure is needed in order to include components that require predominantly linguistically transmitted sociocultural knowledge. === Medicine, Faculty of === Audiology and Speech Sciences, School of === Graduate
author McCullough, Carol H.
spellingShingle McCullough, Carol H.
The narrative abilities of a severely hard-of-hearing child
author_facet McCullough, Carol H.
author_sort McCullough, Carol H.
title The narrative abilities of a severely hard-of-hearing child
title_short The narrative abilities of a severely hard-of-hearing child
title_full The narrative abilities of a severely hard-of-hearing child
title_fullStr The narrative abilities of a severely hard-of-hearing child
title_full_unstemmed The narrative abilities of a severely hard-of-hearing child
title_sort narrative abilities of a severely hard-of-hearing child
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/1961
work_keys_str_mv AT mcculloughcarolh thenarrativeabilitiesofaseverelyhardofhearingchild
AT mcculloughcarolh narrativeabilitiesofaseverelyhardofhearingchild
_version_ 1718586204648112128