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Peer reviewedOelschlaeger, Mary L.; Damico, Jack S. – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2000
Conversation analysis was used to investigate a conversational partner's strategies when assisting with the word searches of an aphasic person. Analysis of 38 authentic videotaped conversation sequences identified four conversation strategies systematically and collaboratively used: guessing, alternative guessing, completion, and closing…
Descriptors: Adults, Aphasia, Communication Skills, Expressive Language
Peer reviewedObenchain, Patrick; Menn, Lise; Yoshinaga-Itano, Christine – Volta Review, 1999
A study involving 19 children with hearing impairments found that those who developed intelligible speech by 36 months had at 16-23 months a high frequency of vocal utterances, a high proportion of vocal utterances that included intelligible true words, a large consonant inventory, and a high percentage of intonational utterances. (Contains…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Expressive Language, Hearing Impairments, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedHayes, Phebe A.; Norris, Janet; Flaitz, James R. – Journal of Secondary Gifted Education, 1998
This study analyzed spoken narratives of 10 high-achieving and 10 under-achieving gifted adolescents. Results suggested that language problems are common in underachievers. Variables contributing most to differences were number of complete episodes produced, number of statements referring to characters' internal states, reactions of characters to…
Descriptors: Adolescents, Expressive Language, Gifted Disabled, Language Impairments
Peer reviewedGreenhalgh, Kellie S.; Strong, Carol J. – Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools, 2001
This study examined differences in literate language use in spoken narratives of 104 children with and 52 children without language impairment across four age levels (6-10). Group membership main effects were statistically significant for conjunctions and elaborated noun phrases with effect sizes ranging from small to moderate. No statistically…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Conjunctions, Elementary Education, Expressive Language
Peer reviewedMarquardt, Thomas P.; Sussman, Harvey M.; Snow, Theresa; Jacks, Adam – Journal of Communication Disorders, 2002
Three children with developmental apraxia of speech (DAS) identified syllables in words, judged intrasyllabic sound positions, and constructed syllable shapes within monosyllabic frames. Results suggest that DAS children demonstrate an apparent breakdown in the ability to perceive "syllableness" and to access and compare syllable…
Descriptors: Children, Delayed Speech, Expressive Language, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedDomingo, Robert A.; Goldstein-Alpern, Neva – Infant-Toddler Intervention: The Transdisciplinary Journal, 1999
In this study, six percent of a 2-year-old child's spontaneous utterances in six 3-hour samples were identified as one of three expressive metalinguistic utterance types: interrogatives, hypothesis tests, and evocative utterances. Evocative utterances were used most frequently. The subject used the strategies to seek nouns 78 percent of the time.…
Descriptors: Child Development, Developmental Stages, Expressive Language, Language Acquisition
Peer reviewedLampropoulos, Georgios K.; Nicholas, Donald R. – Journal of Mental Health Counseling, 2001
Proposes an expressive-cognitive approach to the resolution of unfinished business as an eclectic adaptation of the experiential model for resolving unfinished business. Suggests that this approach may be used as a complementary or alternative choice to the empty-chair intervention, particularly for clients who have difficulty engaging in or…
Descriptors: Client Characteristics (Human Services), Cognitive Processes, Conflict Resolution, Counseling Techniques
Ingersoll, Brooke; Dvortcsak, Anna; Whalen, Christina; Sikora, Darryn – Focus on Autism and Other Developmental Disabilities, 2005
Developmental, social-pragmatic (DSP) interventions are based on the study of interactions between typically developing infants and their mothers. Despite the fact that DSP approaches are firmly grounded in developmental theory, there is limited research on the efficacy of these interventions for promoting social-communicative behavior in young…
Descriptors: Pervasive Developmental Disorders, Young Children, Therapy, Intervention
Rapp, Brenda; Goldrick, Matthew – Psychological Review, 2004
In his comment, A. Roelofs claimed that a feedforward-only theory of spoken word production (WEAVER++) can account for certain basic facts of spoken word production that B. Rapp and M. Goldrick (2000) argued could not be accounted for by feedforward-only theories. Rapp and Goldrick argued that to account for these facts, mechanisms such as…
Descriptors: Evidence, Cognitive Processes, Feedback (Response), Reader Response
Lowenkron, Barry – Analysis of Verbal Behavior, 2004
Although the verbal operants that comprise Skinner's account of verbal behavior provide a seemingly complete description of the behavior of the speaker with respect to what is ordinarily called the expression of meanings, it may be shown that the account is intrinsically deficient in describing the receptive behavior of listeners with regard to…
Descriptors: Children, Verbal Stimuli, Comprehension, Form Classes (Languages)
Button, Stuart W. – Education 3-13, 2005
This article is based on the analysis of a fragment of conversation recorded in a year one classroom. It explores the ways in which young children use language to produce a meaningful world and highlights the importance of language in the presentation of social experience. It then draws upon this analysis to discuss how children learn to use…
Descriptors: Language Usage, Connected Discourse, Child Language, Emergent Literacy
Ukrainetz, Teresa A.; Justice, Laura M.; Kaderavek, Joan N.; Eisenberg, Sarita L.; Gillam, Ronald B.; Harm, Heide M. – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 2005
Purpose: This study analyzed the development of expressive elaboration in fictional narratives for school-age children. Method: The analysis was derived from high-point analysis, but it was tailored to capture the artful aspects of fictional storytelling. Narratives were elicited with a short picture sequence of a likely life event from 293…
Descriptors: Fiction, Expressive Language, Children, Evaluation Methods
Simkin, Zoe; Conti-Ramsden, Gina – Child Language Teaching and Therapy, 2006
The literacy abilities of 11-year old children with specific language impairment (SLI) were investigated through comparing subgroups with current expressive-only language impairment (E-SLI, n 30), current combined expressive and receptive language impairment (ER-SLI, n 32) and a history of now-resolved language impairment (Resolved-SLI, n 28). The…
Descriptors: Expressive Language, Receptive Language, Language Impairments, Children
Selassie, G. Rejno-Habte; Viggedal, G.; Olsson, I.; Jennische, M. – Developmental Medicine & Child Neurology, 2008
We studied expressive and receptive language, oral motor ability, attention, memory, and intelligence in 20 6-year-old children with epilepsy (14 females, six males; mean age 6y 5mo, range 6y-6y 11mo) without learning disability, cerebral palsy (CP), and/or autism, and in 30 reference children without epilepsy (18 females, 12 males; mean age 6y…
Descriptors: Epilepsy, Autism, Learning Disabilities, Seizures
Fletcher, Kathryn L.; Cross, Jennifer R.; Tanney, Angela L.; Schneider, Mercedes; Finch, William H. – Early Education and Development, 2008
Reading to children has been advocated as a way to enhance language and literacy skills (A. G. Bus, M. H. van IJzendoorn, & A. D. Pellegrini, 1995). However, little is known about reading with children under age 3 (K. L. Fletcher & E. Reese, 2005), particularly in at-risk samples (A. van Kleeck, 2003). In the current study of 87 primary caregivers…
Descriptors: Early Intervention, Reading Strategies, Caregivers, Path Analysis

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