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Exploring the interactive and linguistic dimensions of parent input and their role in the development of children's simple sentences.
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Exploring Sentence Diversity at the Boundary of Typical and Impaired Language Abilities
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In: J Speech Lang Hear Res (2020)
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Grammatical input differences remain six-months following toy talk instruction
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Abstract:
Parents’ use of lexical noun phrases (NP) in the subject position of declarative sentences is rare, occurring in less than 3% of parents’ child-directed utterances, but diversity in this input variable is a significant predictor of young children’s grammatical growth (Hadley et al., 2017). Hadley and colleagues demonstrated that brief instruction (~ 3½ hours) in responsive interaction strategies and two toy talk strategies – talk about the toys and give the items its name increased parents’ frequency and diversity of lexical NP subjects (e.g., The penguin is fast.) immediately post-instruction. This study examined whether parents who received toy talk instruction (n = 19) when their children were between 21 and 24 months of age maintained use of lexical NP subjects during play-based parent-child interactions six months later compared to parents in a control group (n = 19) who did not receive the instruction. Results indicated that the frequency and diversity of lexical NP subjects decreased from 24 to 30 months for treatment parents; however treatment parents continued to use significantly more lexical NP subjects than the control parents. Production of lexical NP subjects continued to remain low for the control group over time, documenting the need for instruction to alter this input variable. Future research should consider including periodic, ongoing instruction for parents to maintain use of toy talk strategies.
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Keyword:
Grammar; Language development; Language intervention; Parent input; Speech-language pathology
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URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2142/98129
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Uniformity of pronoun case errors in typical development: the association between children's first person and third person case errors in a longitudinal study
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Child-adult differences in implicit and explicit second language learning
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The Sentence Diversity Checklist: Characterizing Early Syntactic Development Using Parent Report
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Parent-Examiner Differences in their use of Toy Talk and its Influence on Input Informativeness
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Toy talk: A simple strategy to promote richer grammatical input
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Understanding Contributors to Input Informativeness for Tense Marking: Overlap among English Typology, Parent-Toddler Interaction Style, and Register
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Use of family history information in school-based prevention practice
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Social biases toward children with speech and language impairments: A correlative causal model of language limitations
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