SPOKEN AND WRITTEN LANGUAGE RELATIONSHIPS IN LANGUAGE LEARNING-IMPAIRED AND NORMALLY ACHIEVING SCHOOL-AGE-CHILDREN

被引:189
|
作者
GILLAM, RB
JOHNSTON, JR
机构
[1] UNIV MISSOURI,COLUMBIA,MO 65201
[2] UNIV BRITISH COLUMBIA,VANCOUVER V6T 1W5,BC,CANADA
来源
JOURNAL OF SPEECH AND HEARING RESEARCH | 1992年 / 35卷 / 06期
关键词
SPEAKING; WRITING; NARRATIVES; SCHOOL-AGE CHILDREN; LANGUAGE IMPAIRED;
D O I
10.1044/jshr.3506.1303
中图分类号
H [语言、文字];
学科分类号
05 ;
摘要
Students with language/learning impairment (LLI) and three groups of normally achieving children matched for chronological age, spoken language, and reading abilities wrote and told stories that were analyzed according to a three-dimensional language analysis system. Spoken narratives were linguistically superior to written narratives in many respects. The content of written narratives, however, was organized differently than the content of spoken narratives. Spoken narratives contained more local interconnections than global interconnections; the opposite was true for written narratives. LLI and reading-matched children evidenced speaking-writing relationships that differed from those of the age- and language-matched children in the way language form was organized. Further, LLI children produced more grammatically unacceptable complex T-units in their spoken and written stories than students from any of the three matched groups. The discussion focuses on mechanisms underlying the development of speaking-writing differences and ramifications of spoken-language impairment for spoken and written-language relationships.
引用
收藏
页码:1303 / 1315
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] FORM AND MEANING IN THE WRITTEN LANGUAGE OF HEARING-IMPAIRED CHILDREN
    YOSHINAGAITANO, C
    SNYDER, L
    VOLTA REVIEW, 1985, 87 (05) : 75 - 90
  • [42] Past tense morphology in specifically language impaired and normally developing children
    van der Lely, HKJ
    Ullman, MT
    LANGUAGE AND COGNITIVE PROCESSES, 2001, 16 (2-3): : 177 - 217
  • [43] Comprehension of resultative verbs in normally developing and language impaired German children
    Schulz, P
    Penner, Z
    Wymann, K
    INVESTIGATIONS IN CLINICAL PHONETICS AND LINGUISTICS, 2002, : 115 - 129
  • [44] Anaphoric cohesion in young language-impaired and normally developing children
    de Weck, G
    PERSPECTIVES ON LANGUAGE ACQUISITION, 1998, : 292 - 308
  • [45] Narrative spoken language skills in severely hearing impaired school-aged children with cochlear implants
    Boons, Tinne
    De Raeve, Leo
    Langereis, Margreet
    Peeraer, Louis
    Wouters, Jan
    van Wieringen, Astrid
    RESEARCH IN DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES, 2013, 34 (11) : 3833 - 3846
  • [46] THE SPOKEN LANGUAGE OF TEACHERS AND PUPILS IN THE EDUCATION OF HEARING-IMPAIRED CHILDREN
    HUNTINGTON, A
    WATTON, F
    VOLTA REVIEW, 1986, 88 (01) : 5 - 19
  • [47] THE FOUNDATIONS OF SPOKEN LANGUAGE FOR HEARING-IMPAIRED CHILDREN - LING,D
    WAGSTAFF, PA
    JOURNAL OF THE BRITISH ASSOCIATION OF TEACHERS OF THE DEAF, 1990, 14 (03): : 89 - 89
  • [48] METAPHOR COMPREHENSION BY LANGUAGE-LEARNING DISABLED AND NORMALLY ACHIEVING ADOLESCENT BOYS
    JONES, J
    STONE, CA
    LEARNING DISABILITY QUARTERLY, 1989, 12 (04) : 251 - 260
  • [49] Written cohesion in children with and without language learning disabilities
    Koutsoftas, Anthony D.
    Petersen, Victoria
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF LANGUAGE & COMMUNICATION DISORDERS, 2017, 52 (05) : 612 - 625
  • [50] Effects of short-term second language learning on the development of individual semantic networks in written and spoken language
    Dong, Jie
    Zhang, Wenjia
    Li, Aqian
    Lee, Yujun
    Cai, Hao
    Jiang, Wenjing
    Yan, Hao
    NEUROSCIENCE LETTERS, 2024, 818