What Is the Role of Questioning in Young Children's Fluency?

Most therapy programs for young children who stutter (CWS) involve caregiver counseling and adjustment of caregiver behavior to maximize opportunities for the child to be more fluent. One component sometimes included as a recommended adjustment is a reduction in caregiver question asking, as questio...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of speech-language pathology 2022-09, Vol.31 (5), p.2061-2077
Hauptverfasser: Garbarino, Julianne, Bernstein Ratner, Nan
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Bernstein Ratner, Nan
description Most therapy programs for young children who stutter (CWS) involve caregiver counseling and adjustment of caregiver behavior to maximize opportunities for the child to be more fluent. One component sometimes included as a recommended adjustment is a reduction in caregiver question asking, as question asking is hypothesized to increase language formulation demands on the child. However, there is limited research to guide clinician advisement to caregivers that has controlled for numerous potential confounding factors, including utterance length and grammaticality, that may impact potential stressors on children. Our aim was to assess whether there was an empirical basis for such recommendations by comparing disfluency profiles of answers to questions and nonanswer utterances produced by children during spontaneous play with parents and examiners. We analyzed fluency and structural properties as well as pragmatic function of 15,782 utterances from language samples produced by 32 CWS and 32 children who do not stutter (CWNS) who were between 28 and 50 months of age. CWS and CWNS were matched on gender and age within 4 months and were matched as closely as possible on maternal education. For utterances produced by CWS, answers to adult questions were significantly likely to contain stuttering-like disfluencies than other utterance types, and this was still true after controlling for utterance length and grammaticality. In contrast, for utterances produced by CWNS, answers to questions were significantly likely to be disfluent than other utterance types after controlling for length and grammaticality. Given the current findings, some prior research, and the documented potential benefits in language development for adult question asking of children, we do not believe that clinicians need to recommend changes to typical question-asking behavior by caregivers of CWS.
doi_str_mv 10.1044/2022_AJSLP-21-00209
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source MEDLINE; Education Source; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Adjustment
Analysis
Behavior
Caregiver Child Relationship
Caregivers
Child
Child development
Child Language
Child, Preschool
Children
Children & youth
Communicative disorders in children
Examiners
Families & family life
Fluency
Grammaticality
Humans
Infant
Language
Language acquisition
Medical personnel
Parent Child Relationship
Parents
Parents & parenting
Pragmatics
Questions
Speaking
Speech
Speech therapy
Stuttering
Stuttering - diagnosis
Stuttering - psychology
Stuttering - therapy
Thinking Skills
Young Children
title What Is the Role of Questioning in Young Children's Fluency?
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