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Int J Speech Lang Pathol. 2008;10(3):132-45. doi: 10.1080/14417040701422390.

A longitudinal investigation of oral narrative skills in children with mixed reading disability.

International journal of speech-language pathology

Marleen F Westerveld, Gail T Gillon, Catherine Moran

Affiliations

  1. University of Canterbury, New Zealand.

PMID: 20840047 DOI: 10.1080/14417040701422390

Abstract

This 2-year longitudinal study investigated oral narrative ability in 14 children with mixed reading disability and their age-matched peers with typical development. The children were aged between 6;4 and 7;8 at the commencement of the study and assessments were administered individually to the children on three occasions over a 2-year period. Oral narratives were elicited in a personal narrative context (i.e., the child was encouraged to relate personal experiences in response to photo prompts) and a story retelling context. Oral narrative comprehension was assessed in a fictional story context through questions relating to story structure elements. Results indicated that the children with mixed reading disability demonstrated inferior oral narrative production and oral narrative comprehension performance compared to children with typical reading development at each assessment occasion. To further explore these children's difficulties in oral narrative ability, their performance was compared to a reading comprehension-age match control group at the third assessment trial. The results suggested the children with mixed reading disability had a specific deficit in oral narrative comprehension.

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