15 results on '"Expressive language"'
Search Results
2. Commercial-off-the-Shelf Games in the Digital Wild and L2 Learner Vocabulary
- Author
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Sundqvist, Pia
- Abstract
The purposes of this study are to examine the relation between playing commercial-off-the-shelf (COTS) games in the wild and L2 English vocabulary and to offer comparisons with non-gamers' vocabulary. Data were collected from two samples of teenage L2 English learners in Sweden, Sample A (N = 1,069) and Sample B (N = 16). Questionnaires and English grades were collected from A and B, productive and receptive vocabulary tests from A, and interviews and essays from B. A quantitative-dominant mixed-methods approach was adopted. Results showed a significant positive correlation between time played and test scores. They also showed that time played was related to types of games played. Multiple regression analysis including time played and types of games as predictor variables and L2 vocabulary as the outcome variable showed that the effect from type disappeared when it was entered into the model, whereas time remained significant. A close examination of 45 words (productive test) revealed significantly higher scores for gamers (compared with non-gamers) at all vocabulary frequency levels, and for particularly difficult words. Overall, findings from Sample B regarding gaming habits and vocabulary (i.e., use of advanced or infrequent words in essays) reflected the results from Sample A, making it possible to conclude that playing COTS games matters for L2 learner vocabulary.
- Published
- 2019
3. Investigating Content and Language Integrated Learning: Insights from Swedish High Schools. Bilingual Education & Bilingualism
- Author
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Sylvén, Liss Kerstin and Sylvén, Liss Kerstin
- Abstract
This book provides a rich and unique longitudinal account of content and language integrated learning (CLIL). The chapters report on the findings from a large-scale, three-year research project undertaken at senior high school level in Sweden. The ecological perspective, with quantitative and qualitative methods, gives voice to both learners and teachers, as well as being an excellent critical example of how such longitudinal research might be carried out. Through emic and etic approaches, the book provides insights into language learning outcomes, both with regard to the target language English and the majority language Swedish; learner motivation among CLIL and non-CLIL students; effects of extramural exposure to English; issues in relation to assessment in CLIL and much more. As a whole, the book offers an unprecedented overview of learner outcomes and detailed insights into the comparison of CLIL and non-CLIL education. While it is embedded in the Swedish context, the nature of this study means that it has strong implications on an international basis. This book contains the following chapters: (1) CLIL, CLISS and the Swedish Context: An Overview (Liss Kerstin Sylvén); (2) Mapping CLIL in Sweden (BethAnne Paulsrud); (3) The CLISS Student: Some Background Factors of the Participating Students in the CLISS Project (Britt-Marie Apelgren); (4) Assessment in CLIL (Helena Reierstam and Liss Kerstin Sylvén); (5) CLIL and Motivation Revisited: A Longitudinal Perspective (Amy S. Thompson and Liss Kerstin Sylvén); (6) English Receptive Vocabulary (Liss Kerstin Sylvén and Sölve Ohlander); (7) English Productive Proficiency (Eva Olsson and Liss Kerstin Sylvén); (8) English Reading Comprehension (Liss Kerstin Sylvén and Sölve Ohlander); (9) Extramural English (Liss Kerstin Sylvén); (10) The Development of Academic Vocabulary in Swedish (Per Holmberg); (11) The Development of Linguistic Correctness in CLIL and Non-CLIL Students' Writing in the L1 at Upper Secondary School (Maria Lim Falk); (12) Visualizing Vocabulary: An Investigation into Student Assignments in CLIL and Non-CLIL Contexts (Sofie Johansson and Elisabeth Ohlsson); (13) The Development of Swedish Receptive Vocabulary in CLIL: A Multilingual Perspective (Inger Lindberg and Sofie Johansson); (14) Multilingual Students in a CLIL School: Possibilities and Perspectives (Tore Otterup); (15) Just a Little Plus: The CLIL Student Perspective (BethAnne Paulsrud); and (16) Teaching and Learning Content through Two Languages: The Biology and History Teacher Perspective (Ylva Sandberg). Epilogue by Liss Kerstin Sylvén.
- Published
- 2019
4. Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders Who Do Not Develop Phrase Speech in the Preschool Years
- Author
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Norrelgen, Fritjof, Fernell, Elisabeth, Eriksson, Mats, Hedvall, Asa, Persson, Clara, Sjölin, Maria, Gillberg, Christopher, and Kjellmer, Liselotte
- Abstract
There is uncertainty about the proportion of children with autism spectrum disorders who do not develop phrase speech during the preschool years. The main purpose of this study was to examine this ratio in a population-based community sample of children. The cohort consisted of 165 children (141 boys, 24 girls) with autism spectrum disorders aged 4-6?years followed longitudinally over 2?years during which time they had received intervention at a specialized autism center. In this study, data collected at the 2-year follow-up were used. Three categories of expressive language were defined: nonverbal, minimally verbal, and phrase speech. Data from the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales-II were used to classify expressive language. A secondary objective of the study was to analyze factors that might be linked to verbal ability, namely, child age, cognitive level, autism subtype and severity of core autism symptoms, developmental regression, epilepsy or other medical conditions, and intensity of intervention. The proportion of children who met the criteria for nonverbal, minimally verbal, and phrase speech were 15%, 10%, and 75%, respectively. The single most important factor linked to expressive language was the child's cognitive level, and all children classified as being nonverbal or minimally verbal had intellectual disability.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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5. Spelling Difficulties in School-Aged Girls with Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: Behavioral, Psycholinguistic, Cognitive, and Graphomotor Correlates
- Author
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Åsberg Johnels, Jakob, Kopp, Svenny, and Gillberg, Christopher
- Abstract
Writing difficulties are common among children with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), but the nature of these difficulties has not been well studied. Here we relate behavioral, psycholinguistic, cognitive (memory/executive), and graphomotor measures to spelling skills in school-age girls with ADHD (n = 30) and an age-matched group of typically developed spellers (TYPSP, n = 35). When subdividing the ADHD group into those with poor (ADHDPSP, n = 19) and typical spelling (ADHDTYPSP, n = 11), the two subgroups did not differ with regard to inattentive or hyperactive-impulsive symptom severity according to parent or teacher ratings. Both ADHD subgroups also had equally severe difficulties in graphomotor control-handwriting and (parent ratings of) written expression as compared to the TYPSP group. In contrast, ADHDPSP had problems relative to ADHDTYPSP and TYPSP on phonological and orthographic recoding (choice tasks) and verbal memory (digit span) and were more likely to make commissions on a continuous performance task (CPT). Further analyses using the collapsed ADHD group showed that both digit span and the presence of CPT commissions predicted spelling performance independently of each other. Finally, results showed that phonological recoding skills mediated the association between digit span and spelling performance in ADHD. Theoretical and educational implications are discussed.
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- 2014
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6. English as an Academic Language at a Swedish University: Parallel Language Use and the 'Threat' of English
- Author
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Bolton, Kingsley and Kuteeva, Maria
- Abstract
In recent years, universities across Europe have increasingly adopted the use of English as an academic lingua franca. Our article discusses current trends in Swedish higher education by presenting the results of a large-scale survey on the use of English conducted at Stockholm University. The survey involved 668 staff and 4524 students and focused on the use of English for academic purposes and students' and teachers' attitudes to English as a medium of instruction. The results indicate that complex patterns of academic English use emerge, which are related to the specific discipline studied, the level of instruction (undergraduate versus Master's) and the receptive versus productive use of English. They also indicate that in the sciences the use of English is a pragmatic reality for both teachers and students, whereas in the humanities and social sciences, English is typically used as an additional or auxiliary language in parallel with Swedish. (Contains 3 tables and 6 figures.)
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- 2012
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7. Genetic and Environmental Influences on Vocabulary and Reading Development
- Author
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Olson, Richard K., Keenan, Janice M., Byrne, Brian, Samuelsson, Stefan, Coventry, William L., Corley, Robin, Wadsworth, Sally J., Willcutt, Erik G., DeFries, John C., Pennington, Bruce F., and Hulslander, Jacqueline
- Abstract
Genetic and environmental relations between vocabulary and reading skills were explored longitudinally from preschool through Grades 2 and 4. At preschool there were strong shared-environment and weak genetic influences on both vocabulary and print knowledge but substantial differences in their source. Separation of etiology for vocabulary and reading continued for word recognition and decoding through Grade 4, but genetic and environmental correlations between vocabulary and reading comprehension approached unity by Grade 4, when vocabulary and word recognition accounted for all of the genetic and shared environment influences on reading comprehension. (Contains 7 tables.)
- Published
- 2011
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8. Can Severely Language Delayed 3-Year-Olds Be Identified at 18 Months? Evaluation of a Screening Version of the MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventories
- Author
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Westerlund, Monica, Berglund, Eva, and Eriksson, Marten
- Abstract
Purpose: To evaluate the effectiveness of a screening instrument (the Swedish Communication Screening at 18 months of age; SCS18), derived from the Swedish MacArthur-Bates Communicative Development Inventory, in identification of 18-month-old children who will be severely language disabled by 3 years of age, the authors (a) analyzed which SCS18's component yielded the best prediction, (b) compared the productivity figures of the SCS18 with those of the traditional method of identification, and (c) tried different cutoff criteria of the SCS18. Method: Half of the child health care (CHC) centers in a Swedish county were randomly selected to use the SCS18 (e.g., a checklist supporting parents in assessing their child's word production, word comprehension, and communicative gestures). Remaining CHC centers used an informal assessment. Expressive and receptive language was subsequently judged with an observation for 3-year-olds that is routine in the county. An unselected population of 2,080 children participated at 18 months of age and again at 3 years of age. Result: Number of spoken words yielded the best prediction, and SCS18 was superior to the traditional method. A sensitivity of 50%, however, was not enough, and a stricter criterion resulted in too many false positives to be acceptable as routine. Conclusion: Although the SCS18 has strength, the age of 18 months seems to be too early for identification of severe language disability. (Contains 5 tables and 2 figures.)
- Published
- 2006
9. Non-Word Repetition and Non-Word Discrimination in Swedish Preschool Children
- Author
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Reuterskiold-Wagner, Christina, Sahlen, Birgitta, and Nyman, Angelique
- Abstract
By looking at data on expressive phonology, non-word repetition, non-word discrimination and phonological sensitivity in two groups of Swedish children, the common basis for tasks tapping into different levels of phonological processing is discussed. Two studies were performed, one including children with language impairment (LI) and one including children with normal language development (NL). A discrimination task consisting of non-word pairs differing in one phoneme was developed. In both groups there was a significant correlation between non-word repetition and phoneme identification. In children with LI phoneme identification was significantly correlated with expressive phonology. In children with NL non-word repetition correlated significantly with non-word discrimination, which was linked both to rhyme recognition and phoneme identification. Non-word discrimination might be equally useful as non-word repetition as an early screening tool and would circumvent the confounding factor of an expressive phonological impairment as well as decrease the amount of complicating factors involved in scoring procedures.
- Published
- 2005
10. Everyday Phenomena and Teachers' Training.
- Author
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Eskilsson, Olle and Holgersson, Ingemar
- Abstract
Investigated the ability of Swedish student teachers to explain everyday phenomena in science education, asking all fourth-term student teachers about phenomena where transformations of matter were involved. Analysis of students' written answers indicates that there is a great need in teacher training to work with conceptual understanding and with ways of expressing oneself as a teacher. (SM)
- Published
- 1999
11. The Perspective Structure in the Verbal Flow. No. 4.
- Author
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Lund Univ. (Sweden)., Bierschenk, Bernhard, and Bierschenk, Inger
- Abstract
A study investigated some of the ways in which phenomena are perceived and translated into speech, especially in the assignment of agents in a given situation. Subjects were 16 adults with infant children. The adults were shown the Visual Cliff series of pictures of an infant crawling to its mother across a glass sheet covering an open space with the appearance of varying depth, and asked to describe the pictures for someone who had not seen them and to state which of five areas of life (practical, aesthetic-moral, social, technical-physical, and care) concerned them most. The experiment was conducted in connection with a meeting giving parents information about guarding children against accidents. It was found that the subjects' stated concerns correlated with different perceptual approaches as illustrated by their observations, descriptions, and relations of environmental features. (MSE)
- Published
- 1984
12. Grammatical Characteristics of Swedish Children with SLI.
- Author
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Hansson, Kristina and Nettelbladt, Ulrika
- Abstract
Spontaneous speech samples from 10 Swedish children were analyzed grammatically. The five subjects (age five) with specific language impairment (SLI) differed from controls in their more restricted usage of word order patterns and number of grammatical errors. Their speech also showed frequent omissions of grammatical morphemes. Results suggest that both morphological and syntactic deficits characterize SLI children. (Author/DB)
- Published
- 1995
13. Storytelling in bilingual Turkish-Swedish children: Effects of language, age and exposure on narrative macrostructure.
- Author
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Bohnacker, Ute, Lindgren, Josefin, and Öztekin, Buket
- Subjects
CHILDREN'S language ,LANGUAGE ability ,STORYTELLING ,EXPRESSIVE language ,NARRATIVES - Abstract
The empirical evidence for whether narrative macrostructure skills are shared between a bilingual child's two languages is inconclusive, and it is not known how macrostructure (overall story structure) is influenced by general language proficiency and amount of exposure. The present study investigates these issues in 100 Turkish-Swedish bilingual 4-to-7-year-old children growing up in Sweden. Oral narratives were elicited in both Turkish and Swedish with two picture-based tasks from the Multilingual Assessment Instrument for Narratives (MAIN) in the telling mode. We investigated to what extent the language of elicitation influences bilingual children's macrostructure (story structure, episodic complexity), and explored effects of age, narrative task, narrative length, expressive vocabulary and language exposure, both separately and combined, on macrostructure in the respective language. Story structure and episodic complexity were found to increase similarly with age in both Turkish and Swedish from 4 to 7 years. Scores did not differ between the two MAIN storytelling tasks. Expressive vocabulary and narrative length influenced story structure scores positively and similarly in both languages. Daily language exposure and length of exposure to Swedish did not show any significant effect. The results can be interpreted in support of a carry-over of narrative macrostructural skills between the two languages. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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14. Internationally adopted children with and without a cleft lip and palate showed no differences in language ability at school-age.
- Author
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Larsson, AnnaKarin, Persson, Christina, Klintö, Kristina, and Miniscalco, Carmela
- Subjects
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CLEFT lip , *CLEFT palate , *ADOPTED children , *LANGUAGE ability , *ENDANGERED languages - Abstract
Aim: The aim of this study was to investigate language ability in internationally adopted children aged 7-8 years with and without a unilateral cleft lip and palate.Methods: We compared 27 internationally adopted children with a unilateral cleft lip and palate, adopted from China, with a group of 29 children without a cleft lip and palate, adopted from different countries. Participants were recruited from two cleft lip and palate teams in Sweden and through adoption organisations. Assessments were performed using standardised tests of speech and of receptive and expressive language ability. In addition, a parental questionnaire in which speech, language and communication aspects were rated was used.Results: There were no significant differences in language ability between the groups. The only difference was related to speech ability, where the internationally adopted children with unilateral cleft lip and palate scored significantly lower. However, a high proportion of children in both groups scored low on measures of expressive language compared with test norms.Conclusion: The results suggested that having a cleft lip and palate did not increase the risk of language difficulties. Instead, being internationally adopted may be associated with a risk of delayed language development lasting for several years post-adoption. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2021
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15. Verbal competence in narrative retelling in 5-year-olds with unilateral cleft lip and palate.
- Author
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Klintö, Kristina, Salameh, Eva‐Kristina, and Lohmander, Anette
- Subjects
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CHILDREN , *CHI-squared test , *CLEFT lip , *CLEFT palate , *COMMUNICATIVE competence , *COMPARATIVE studies , *LONGITUDINAL method , *RESEARCH funding , *STATISTICS , *VIDEO recording , *DATA analysis , *TASK performance , *NARRATIVES , *INTER-observer reliability , *RETROSPECTIVE studies , *DATA analysis software , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *MANN Whitney U Test - Abstract
Background Research regarding expressive language performance in children born with cleft palate is sparse. The relationship between articulation/phonology and expressive language skills also needs to be further explored. Aims To investigate verbal competence in narrative retelling in 5-year-old children born with unilateral cleft lip and palate (UCLP) and its possible relationship with articulation/phonology at 3 and 5 years of age. Methods & Procedures A total of 49 children, 29 with UCLP treated according to three different procedures for primary palatal surgery and a comparison group of 20 children (COMP), were included. Longitudinally recorded audio files were used for analysis. At ages 3 and 5, the children were presented with a single-word test of word naming and at age 5 also the Bus Story Test (BST). The BST was assessed according to a test manual. The single-word test was phonetically transcribed and the percentage of consonants correct adjusted for age (PCC-A) was calculated. Differences regarding the BST results within the UCLP group were analysed. The results were compared with the results of the COMP group, and also with norm values. In addition, the relationship between the results of the BST and the PCC-A scores at ages 3 and 5 years was analysed. Outcomes & Results No significant group differences or correlations were found. However, 65.5% of the children in the UCLP group had an information score below 1 standard deviation from the norm value compared with 30% in the COMP group. Conclusions A larger proportion of children in the UCLP group than in the COMP group displayed problems with retelling but the differences between the two groups were not significant. There was no association between the BST results in the children with UCLP and previous or present articulatory/phonological competence. Since group size was small in both groups, the findings need to be verified in a larger study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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