Stakeholder perspectives on educational needs and supports for students with developmental language disorder
Students with developmental language disorder (DLD) often experience academic underachievement, and require adjustments and accommodations to access the curriculum. Teachers, allied health professionals and parents/caregivers have varying roles in the education process, and it is essential they work...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of language & communication disorders 2025-01, Vol.60 (1), p.e13134 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Students with developmental language disorder (DLD) often experience academic underachievement, and require adjustments and accommodations to access the curriculum. Teachers, allied health professionals and parents/caregivers have varying roles in the education process, and it is essential they work together to provide optimal support. However, their perspectives on the areas of functioning most impacting learning, the difficulty of school-based tasks and the helpfulness of educational support have received limited attention.
A between-group survey design was used with recruitment occurring from September 2020 to October 2021. A total of 293 participants was comprised of teachers (n = 78), allied health professionals (n = 138) and parents/caregivers (n = 77). All respondents rated the learning impact of seven areas of functioning (academic behaviour, fine/gross motor, language/communication, literacy, numeracy, sensory and social/emotional), the difficulty of 39 school-based tasks, and the helpfulness of 27 educational supports for primary and/or secondary school-aged students with DLD. The groups of school-based tasks were combined into seven subscales (academic behaviour-related tasks, fine/gross motor tasks, language/communication tasks, literacy tasks, numeracy tasks, sensory-related tasks and social/emotional tasks) for analysis. The educational supports were also combined into six subscales (additional time, differentiation/adjustments, individualized support, social/emotional support, technology and visual supports).
All participants rated literacy and language/communication as the areas of functioning most impacting learning and requiring the highest level of support for students with DLD. Literacy tasks were rated the most difficult across stakeholder groups. However, comparison between stakeholder groups showed statistically significant differences between ratings for six (of seven) areas of functioning. Statistically significant differences were identified when rating the difficulty of four (of seven) school-based task subscales. Additional time and visual supports were rated the most helpful educational supports across groups. Overall, teachers and allied health professionals rated areas of functioning and school-based tasks as more difficult than parents/caregivers, although they shared similar perspectives on five (of six) educational support subscales.
Literacy and language/communication are the areas of functioning rated to be most impactin |
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ISSN: | 1368-2822 1460-6984 1460-6984 |
DOI: | 10.1111/1460-6984.13134 |