Written Language As a Window into Residual Language Deficits: a Study of Children with Persistent and Residual Speech and Language Impairments
Overview
Psychology
Social Sciences
Authors
Affiliations
Previous work has suggested that, because writing is a late-acquired and complex skill, it may be a particularly sensitive index of language difficulties in children. Evidence in support of this view was obtained in a study contrasting 161 normally-developing control children aged from 7.5 to 13 years with 75 twin children of the same age who either had specific speech-language impairments, or were co-twins of affected children. Written narratives were elicited from children using a sequence of five photographs depicting a simple story, and were analysed for grammatical complexity and accuracy, intelligibility, and semantic content. Only 42 of the twins could spell well enough to attempt the narrative task. Some co-twins of affected children had deficits in written language, despite normal performance on oral language tests. Most children with language impairments were poor at writing, with particularly marked deficits on a measure of spelling and punctuation. Children with language impairments made a relatively high proportion of phonologically inaccurate spelling errors when compared with younger children at a similar vocabulary level. Those who did poorly on a nonword repetition test were especially likely to have poor written language. However, four children with pure speech difficulties produced age-appropriate written narratives.
Balboa-Castells R, Ahufinger N, Sanz-Torrent M, Andreu L Front Psychol. 2024; 15:1360245.
PMID: 38666234 PMC: 11043832. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1360245.
Critten S, Connelly V, Dockrell J, Mundy I, ORourke L, Callaghan L Front Psychol. 2023; 14:1112462.
PMID: 37287777 PMC: 10243193. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2023.1112462.
The home language environment in rural China: variations across family characteristics.
Ma Y, Jonsson L, Yao Z, Zhang X, Friesen D, Medina A BMC Public Health. 2023; 23(1):354.
PMID: 36797712 PMC: 9936727. DOI: 10.1186/s12889-023-15245-2.
Effect of language therapy alone for developmental language disorder in children: A meta-analysis.
Fan S, Ma B, Song X, Wang Y Front Psychol. 2022; 13:922866.
PMID: 36262431 PMC: 9574219. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2022.922866.
Average One Year Change in Lexical Measures of Written Narratives for School Age Students.
Wood C, Schatschneider C, Hart S Read Writ Q. 2021; 36(3):260-277.
PMID: 33953527 PMC: 8095675. DOI: 10.1080/10573569.2019.1635544.