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McCartney, Elspeth; Boyle, James; Bannatyne, Susan; Jessiman, Emma; Campbell, Cathy; Kelsey, Cherry; Smith, Jennifer; McArthur, Jane; O'Hare, Anne – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2005
Background: Many speech and language therapists (SLTs) in the UK work with speech and language therapy assistants, and the numbers of SLT assistants is expected to grow. There has been very little empirical investigation of how SLTs feel about this situation or the effect on working practices of working indirectly. Aims: To investigate SLTs'…
Descriptors: Therapy, Opinions, Intervention, Content Analysis
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Moriarty, Brigid C.; Gillon, Gail T. – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2006
Aims: To investigate the effectiveness of an integrated phonological awareness intervention to improve the speech production, phonological awareness and printed word decoding skills for three children with childhood apraxia of speech (CAS) aged 7;3, 6;3 and 6;10. The three children presented with severely delayed phonological awareness skills…
Descriptors: Speech Impairments, Phonemes, Intervention, Phoneme Grapheme Correspondence
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Law, J.; Dockrell, J. E.; Castelnuovo, E.; Williams, K.; Seeff, B.; Normand, C. – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2006
Background: High levels of early language difficulties raise practical issues about the efficient and effective means of meeting children's needs. Persistent language difficulties place significant financial pressures on health and education services. This has led to large investment in intervention in the early years; yet, little is known about…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Early Intervention, Costs, Speech Therapy
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Harrison, Elisabeth; Onslow, Mark; Menzies, Ross – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2004
Background: Data have accumulated to show that the Lidcombe Program of early stuttering intervention is a safe treatment with positive outcomes for preschoolers who stutter, and a randomized controlled trial is under way at the time of writing. Program components have not been investigated experimentally so the functionality of each component is…
Descriptors: Speech Impairments, Early Intervention, Stuttering, Preschool Children
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Sell, Debbie; Mars, Michael; Worrell, Emma – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2006
Background: A prosthetic approach to velopharyngeal dysfunction (VPD) is not new. However, a collaborative interdisciplinary team approach by a speech-and-language therapist, dental specialist and maxillofacial technician, including accurate fitting using nasendoscopy, has provided an opportunity to define the clinical care pathway, and audit the…
Descriptors: Speech Impairments, Assistive Technology, Intervention, Outcomes of Treatment
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Crosbie, Sharon; Holm, Alison; Dodd, Barbara – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2005
Background: Children with speech disorder are a heterogeneous group (e.g. in terms of severity, types of errors and underlying causal factors). Much research has ignored this heterogeneity, giving rise to contradictory intervention study findings. This situation provides clinical motivation to identify the deficits in the speech-processing chain…
Descriptors: Speech Therapy, Intervention, Speech Impairments, Comparative Analysis
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Pascoe, Michelle; Stackhouse, Joy; Wells, Bill – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2005
Single case studies are a valuable means of providing information about the outcomes of speech and language intervention. Many previous studies have used phonological analysis as a theoretical basis, while others have used psycholinguistic models. The present study combines these approaches to assessment, intervention and evaluation of outcomes.…
Descriptors: Speech Therapy, Research Design, Psycholinguistics, Intervention
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Hesketh, Anne – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2004
Background: There are conflicting reports in the research literature of the literacy outcome of children with speech disorder. The link between phonological awareness and literacy in typically developing and literacy delayed children is well established, but there is less research specifically into children with an isolated speech disorder (i.e.…
Descriptors: Children, Reading Skills, Emergent Literacy, Reading Difficulties
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Webber, Margaret J.; Packman, Ann; Onslow, Mark – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2004
Background: The paper reports on a laboratory investigation of the effects of self-modelling on stuttering rate in adolescents and adults. Self-modelling refers to a therapeutic or training method, usually involving videotape, that uses exposure to oneself performing selected error-free behaviours as the conduit for promoting behaviour change.…
Descriptors: Speech Impairments, Foreign Countries, Adolescents, Adults
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Denne, M.; Langdown, N.; Pring, T.; Roy, P. – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2005
Background: Recent research has shown that phonological awareness therapy can improve speech production in children with expressive phonological disorders. This approach may be appealing to clinicians as the therapy may also benefit the children's general phonological abilities and lead to gains in their literacy skills. Aims: To examine the…
Descriptors: Therapy, Speech Communication, Literacy, Phonology
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Leitao, Suze; Fletcher, Janet – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2004
Background: Theoretical and empirical support now exists for the finding that many children with expressive phonological impairment experience problems in acquiring phonological awareness and early literacy skills. Few studies, however, have examined the long-term academic and literacy outcomes for this population, in particular as the…
Descriptors: Phonological Awareness, Spelling, Reading Comprehension, Emergent Literacy
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Vance, Maggie; Stackhouse, Joy; Wells, Bills – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2005
Background: In recent years, clinicians have been using a psycholinguistic approach to the assessment and remediation of children's developmental speech disorders. This requires the comparison of a child's performance across a range of speech-production tasks. Aims: To describe the profile of performance across different speech-production tasks in…
Descriptors: Psycholinguistics, Speech Communication, Speech Impairments, Young Children
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Duchan, Judith F. – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2006
Background: The impact of speech therapists' conceptual frameworks on their clinical methods tends to be ignored or taken for granted by today's practitioners. One way to show the importance of such frameworks is to study how they were used previously. John Thelwall, a 19th-century elocutionist, offers a rich source for studying the influence of…
Descriptors: Speech Therapy, Research Methodology, Schemata (Cognition), Schematic Studies
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Fillingham, Joanne; Sage, Karen; Ralph, Matthew Lambon – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2005
Background: Studies from the amnesia literature suggest that errorless learning can produce superior results to errorful learning. However, it was found in a previous investigation by the present authors that errorless and errorful therapy produced equivalent results for patients with aphasic word-finding difficulties. A study in the academic…
Descriptors: Speech Therapy, Recognition (Psychology), Feedback, Discrimination Learning
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Persson, Christina; Niklasson, Lena; Oskarsdottir, Solveig; Johansson, Susanne; Jonsson, Radi; Soderpalm, Ewa – International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 2006
Background: Language impairment and delayed language onset have been described, although not investigated in detail, in children with 22q11 deletion syndrome. Aims: To investigate different areas of language: the ability to retell a narrative, phonology, syntax and receptive vocabulary in a group of 5-8-year-old children with 22q11 deletion…
Descriptors: Speech Impairments, Young Children, Language Skills, Pervasive Developmental Disorders
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