Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-wg55d Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-02T10:45:41.579Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Learning disabled children's conversational competence: responses to inadequate messages

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 November 2008

Mavis Donahue*
Affiliation:
University of Illinois at Chicago Circle
Ruth Pearl
Affiliation:
University of Illinois at Chicago Circle
Tanis Bryan
Affiliation:
University of Illinois at Chicago Circle
*
Mavis Donahue, College of Education, University of Illinois at Chicago Circle, Box 4348, Chicago, IL 60680

Abstract

This study examined learning disabled children's understanding of conversational rules for initiating the repair of a communicative breakdown. Learning disabled and normal children in grades 1 through 8 played the listener role in a referential communication task requiring them to select referents based on messages varying in informational adequacy. Learning disabled children were less likely to request clarification of inadequate messages and, consequently, made fewer correct referent choices than normal children. Only young learning disabled girls were less able than their normal age-mates to appraise message adequacy. Analyses of response latencies and request type also suggest that the failure to request clarification cannot be attributed solely to linguistic deficits. Results are discussed in terms of the relative contributions of syntactic-semantic ability and social knowledge to conversational competence.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1980

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Asher, S.Children's ability to appraise their own and another person's communication performance. Developmental Psychology, 1976, 12, 2432.Google Scholar
Bates, E.Language and context: The acquisition of pragmatics. New York: Academic Press, 1976.Google Scholar
Bruininks, V. L.Actual and perceived peer status of learning disabled students in mainstream programs. Journal of Special Education, 1978, 12, 5158.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bryan, J., & Perlmutter, B.Female adults' immediate impressions of learning disabled children. Learning Disability Quarterly, 1979, 2, 8088.Google Scholar
Bryan, J., & Sherman, R.Immediate impressions of nonverbal ingratiation attempts by learning disabled boys. Learning Disability Quarterly, 1980, 3, 1928.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bryan, T.Peer popularity of learning disabled children. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1974, 7, 261268.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bryan, T.Peer popularity of learning disabled children. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1976, 9, 307311.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bryan, T.Children's comprehension of nonverbal communication. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1977, 10, 501506.Google Scholar
Bryan, T., & Bryan, J.Social interactions of learning disabled children. Learning Disability Quarterly, 1976, 1, 3339.Google Scholar
Bryan, T., & Bryan, J.Understanding learning disabilities (2nd ed.). Sherman Oaks, Calif.: Alfred, 1978.Google Scholar
Bryan, T., & Pflaum, S.Linguistic, cognitive and social analyses of learning disabled children's interactions. Learning Disability Quarterly, 1978, 1, 7079.Google Scholar
Bryan, T., Wheeler, R., Felcan, J., & Henek, T.Come on, dummy: An observational study of children's communications. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1976, 9, 661669.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cosgrove, J., & Patterson, C.Plans and the development of listener skills. Developmental Psychology, 1977, 13, 557564.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Denckla, M., & Rudel, R.Naming of object drawings by dyslexic and other learning disabled children. Brain and Language, 1976, 3, 116.Google Scholar
Donahue, M.Form and function in mother-toddler conversational turn-taking. Paper presented at the Linguistics Society of America Summer Meeting, Urbana, Ill., 07, 1978.Google Scholar
Dore, J., Gearhart, M., & Newman, D. The structure of nursery school conversations. In Nelson, K. (Ed.), Children's language (Vol. 1). New York: Gardner Press, 1978, 337395.Google Scholar
Dunn, L. M.Peabody picture vocabulary test. Circle Pines, Minn.: American Guidance Service, 1965.Google Scholar
Ervin-Tripp, S., & Mitchell-Kernan, C. (Eds.) Child discourse. New York: Academic Press, 1977.Google Scholar
Fry, M., Johnson, C., & Muehl, S. Oral language production in relation to reading achievement among select second graders. In Bakker, D. and Satz, P. (Eds.), Specific reading disability. The Netherlands: Rotterdam University Press, 1970, 123159.Google Scholar
Garvey, C.Requests and responses in children's speech. Journal of Child Language, 1975, 2, 4163.Google Scholar
Garvey, C. The contingent query: A dependent act in conversation. In Lewis, M. and Rosenblum, L. (Eds.), Interaction, conversation, and the development of language. New York: John Wiley, 1977, 6393.Google Scholar
Grice, H. Logic and conversation. In Cole, P. and Morgan, J. (Eds.), Syntax and semantics, Vol. 3: Speech acts. New York: Seminar Press, 1975, 4158.Google Scholar
Ironsmith, M., & Whitehurst, G.The development of listener skills in communication: How children deal with ambiguous information. Child Development, 1978a, 49, 348352.Google Scholar
Ironsmith, M., & Whitehurst, G.How children learn to listen: The effects of modeling feedback styles on children's performance in referential communication. Developmental Psychology, 1978b, 14, 546554.Google Scholar
Jefferson, G. Side sequences. In Sudnow, D. (Ed.), Studies in social interaction. New York: Free Press, 1972, 294338.Google Scholar
Keenan, E.Conversational competence in children. Journal of Child Language, 1974, 1, 163183.Google Scholar
Keenan, E., & Schieffelin, B. Topic as a discourse notion: A study of topic in the conversations of children and adults. In Li, C. (Ed.), Subject and Topic. New York: Academic Press, 1976.Google Scholar
Keogh, B., Major, S., Omori, H., & Reid, H.Research on marker variables in learning disabilities. Paper presented at the Conference of the Association for Children with Learning Disabilities, Milwaukee, Wis., 02 1980.Google Scholar
Keogh, B., Tchir, C., & Windeguth-Behn, A.Teachers' perceptions of educationally high-risk children. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1974, 7, 367374.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mehan, H.Learning lessons: Social organization in the classroom. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1979.Google Scholar
Morehead, D., & Ingram, D. The development of base syntax in normal and linguistically deviant children. In Morehead, D. and Morehead, A. (Eds.), Normal and deficient child language. Baltimore: University Park Press, 1976, 209238.Google Scholar
Naslund, R., Thorpe, L., & Lefever, D.SRA Achievement Series Test. Chicago: Science Research Associates, 1978.Google Scholar
Owen, R., Adams, P., Forrest, T., Stolz, L., & Fisher, S.Learning disorders in children: Sibling studies. Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 1971, 36, (Serial No. 144).Google Scholar
Patterson, C., Cosgrove, J., & O'Brien, R. Nonverbal indicants of comprehension and noncomprehension in children. Developmental Psychology, in press.Google Scholar
Patterson, C., Massad, C., & Cosgrove, J.Children's referential communication: Components of plans for effective listening. Developmental Psychology, 1978, 14, 401406.Google Scholar
Patterson, C., & Massad, C. Facilitating referential communication among children: The listener as teacher. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, in press.Google Scholar
Scranton, T., & Ryckman, D.Sociometric status of learning disabled children in an integrative program. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1979, 12, 402407.Google Scholar
Siperstein, G. N., Bopp, J. J., & Bak, J. J.Social status of learning disabled children. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 1978, 10, 98102.Google Scholar
U.S. Office of Education. Assistance to states for education of handicapped children: Procedures for evaluating specific learning disabilities. Federal Register, 1977, 42, 6508265085.Google Scholar
Vogel, S.Syntactic abilities in normal and dyslexic children. Baltimore: University Park Press, 1975.Google Scholar
Watson, L. R. Conversational participation by language-deficient and normal children. In Andrews, J. and Burns, M. (Eds.), Selected papers in language and phonology II: Remediation of language disorders. Evanston, Ill.: Institute for Continuing Professional Education, 1977, 104109.Google Scholar
Whitehurst, G., & Sonnenschein, S. The development of informative messages in referential communication: Knowing when vs. knowing how. In Dickson, W. P. (Ed.), Children's oral communication skills. New York: Academic Press, in press.Google Scholar
Wiig, E. H., & Harris, S. P.Perception and interpretation of nonverbally expressed emotions by adolescents with learning disabilities. Perceptual and Motor Skills, 1974, 38, 239245.Google Scholar
Wiig, E. H., & Semel, E. M.Language disabilities in children and adolescents. Columbus: Charles E. Merrill, 1976.Google Scholar
Woodcock, R., & Johnson, M.Woodcock-Johnson Psycho-Educational Battery. Boston: Teaching Resources, 1977.Google Scholar