DE eng

Search in the Catalogues and Directories

Hits 1 – 5 of 5

1
Evaluating the clinical utility of the Profile of Oral Narrative Ablility in 4-year-old children
F. Westerveld, Marleen; T. Gillon, Gail; Boyd, Lynda. - : Informa Healthcare, 2012
BASE
Show details
2
Profiling oral narrative ability in young school-aged children
F. Westerveld, Marleen; T. Gillon, Gail. - : Informa Healthcare, 2010
BASE
Show details
3
Oral narrative context effects on poor readers' spoken language performance: Story retelling, story generation, and personal narratives
F. Westerveld, Marleen; T. Gillon, Gail. - : Informa Healthcare, 2010
Abstract: This investigation explored the effects of oral narrative elicitation context on children's spoken language performance. Oral narratives were produced by a group of 11 children with reading disability (aged between 7;11 and 9;3) and an age-matched control group of 11 children with typical reading skills in three different contexts: story retelling, story generation, and personal narratives. In the story retelling condition, the children listened to a story on tape while looking at the pictures in a book, before being asked to retell the story without the pictures. In the story generation context, the children were shown a picture containing a scene and were asked to make up their own story. Personal narratives were elicited with the help of photos and short narrative prompts. The transcripts were analysed at microstructure level on measures of verbal productivity, semantic diversity, and morphosyntax. Consistent with previous research, the results revealed no significant interactions between group and context, indicating that the two groups of children responded to the type of elicitation context in a similar way. There was a significant group effect, however, with the typical readers showing better performance overall on measures of morphosyntax and semantic diversity. There was also a significant effect of elicitation context with both groups of children producing the longest, linguistically most dense language samples in the story retelling context. Finally, the most significant differences in group performance were observed in the story retelling condition, with the typical readers outperforming the poor readers on measures of verbal productivity, number of different words, and percent complex sentences. The results from this study confirm that oral narrative samples can distinguish between good and poor readers and that the story retelling condition may be a particularly useful context for identifying strengths and weaknesses in oral narrative performance. ; No Full Text
Keyword: Applied Linguistics and Educational Linguistics; Lexicon; Linguistic Structures (incl. Grammar; Phonology; Semantics)
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/10072/42151
https://doi.org/10.3109/17549500903414440
BASE
Hide details
4
Oral narrative intervention for children with mixed reading disability
F. Westerveld, Marleen; T. Gillon, Gail. - : Sage Publications Ltd., 2008
BASE
Show details
5
A longitudinal investigation of oral narrative skills in children with mixed reading disability
BASE
Show details

Catalogues
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Bibliographies
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Linked Open Data catalogues
0
Online resources
0
0
0
0
Open access documents
5
0
0
0
0
© 2013 - 2024 Lin|gu|is|tik | Imprint | Privacy Policy | Datenschutzeinstellungen ändern