Narratives of young children with language impairment: form versus content

It has been proposed that narratives reflect a diverse knowledge base. In the narratives produced by children with normally developing language, it is difficult to tease apart the various knowledge domains. However, for children with specific language impairment (SLI), there is asynchrony in the...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Oxelgren, Corinne Marilyn
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2009
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/8203
id ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-8203
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-82032018-01-05T17:34:05Z Narratives of young children with language impairment: form versus content Oxelgren, Corinne Marilyn It has been proposed that narratives reflect a diverse knowledge base. In the narratives produced by children with normally developing language, it is difficult to tease apart the various knowledge domains. However, for children with specific language impairment (SLI), there is asynchrony in the development of at least two knowledge domains, event knowledge and linguistic knowledge. This asynchrony makes it easier to separately examine these knowledge domains within the narrative context. Narrative event knowledge was the focus of this thesis. In particular, two studies were conducted to examine the narrative content structure abilities of younger children with SLI. In Study One, 10 children with SLI, ranging in age from 4-6 years, were language-matched with 10 normal-language (NL) children, ranging in age from 2-4 years. Two sets of line-drawn picture cards were used to elicit two separate narratives. A developmental narrative stages scheme, based on Trabasso, Stein, Rodkin, Munger and Baughn's (1992) research, was devised to score the data. It was hypothesized that children with SLI would produce narrative content structure in advance of their NL counterparts, given their age advantage and likely accompanying advantage in world experience and cognitive development. Data from the group with a lower language level supported the hypothesis. No strong trends were apparent for the group with a higher language level. Study Two mental age (MA) -matched 8 children with SLI (mean MA, 68 months) with 8 NL children (mean MA, 72 months). It was hypothesized that matching by mental age would hold cognitive abilities constant so therefore the two groups would produce equivalent narrative content structure. Overall findings in Study Two supported the hypothesis. However, data from the higher MA-matched group indicated a trend in which children with SLI produced less advanced narrative content structure than their NL counterparts. The two studies, taken together, suggest that as children develop, language experience plays an increasingly significant role in narrative content production. Medicine, Faculty of Audiology and Speech Sciences, School of Graduate 2009-05-26T17:23:44Z 2009-05-26T17:23:44Z 1998 1998-11 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/8203 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. 6743714 bytes application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
description It has been proposed that narratives reflect a diverse knowledge base. In the narratives produced by children with normally developing language, it is difficult to tease apart the various knowledge domains. However, for children with specific language impairment (SLI), there is asynchrony in the development of at least two knowledge domains, event knowledge and linguistic knowledge. This asynchrony makes it easier to separately examine these knowledge domains within the narrative context. Narrative event knowledge was the focus of this thesis. In particular, two studies were conducted to examine the narrative content structure abilities of younger children with SLI. In Study One, 10 children with SLI, ranging in age from 4-6 years, were language-matched with 10 normal-language (NL) children, ranging in age from 2-4 years. Two sets of line-drawn picture cards were used to elicit two separate narratives. A developmental narrative stages scheme, based on Trabasso, Stein, Rodkin, Munger and Baughn's (1992) research, was devised to score the data. It was hypothesized that children with SLI would produce narrative content structure in advance of their NL counterparts, given their age advantage and likely accompanying advantage in world experience and cognitive development. Data from the group with a lower language level supported the hypothesis. No strong trends were apparent for the group with a higher language level. Study Two mental age (MA) -matched 8 children with SLI (mean MA, 68 months) with 8 NL children (mean MA, 72 months). It was hypothesized that matching by mental age would hold cognitive abilities constant so therefore the two groups would produce equivalent narrative content structure. Overall findings in Study Two supported the hypothesis. However, data from the higher MA-matched group indicated a trend in which children with SLI produced less advanced narrative content structure than their NL counterparts. The two studies, taken together, suggest that as children develop, language experience plays an increasingly significant role in narrative content production. === Medicine, Faculty of === Audiology and Speech Sciences, School of === Graduate
author Oxelgren, Corinne Marilyn
spellingShingle Oxelgren, Corinne Marilyn
Narratives of young children with language impairment: form versus content
author_facet Oxelgren, Corinne Marilyn
author_sort Oxelgren, Corinne Marilyn
title Narratives of young children with language impairment: form versus content
title_short Narratives of young children with language impairment: form versus content
title_full Narratives of young children with language impairment: form versus content
title_fullStr Narratives of young children with language impairment: form versus content
title_full_unstemmed Narratives of young children with language impairment: form versus content
title_sort narratives of young children with language impairment: form versus content
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/8203
work_keys_str_mv AT oxelgrencorinnemarilyn narrativesofyoungchildrenwithlanguageimpairmentformversuscontent
_version_ 1718587898688700416