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PURPOSE: This study was designed primarily to determine if a critical-thinking task involving fables would elicit greater syntactic complexity than a conversational task in adolescents. Another purpose was to determine how well adolescents understand critical-thinking questions about fables. METHOD: Forty adolescents (N=20 boys and 20 girls; mean age=14 years) with typical language development answered critical-thinking questions about the deeper meanings of fables. They also participated in a standard conversational task. The syntactic complexity of their responses during the speaking tasks was analyzed for mean length of communication unit (MLCU) and clausal density (CD). RESULTS: Both measures of syntactic complexity, MLCU and CD, were substantially greater during the critical-thinking task compared with the conversational task. It was also found that the adolescents understood the questions quite well, earning a mean accuracy score of 80%. CONCLUSIONS: The critical-thinking task has potential for use as a new type of language-sampling tool to examine language production and comprehension in adolescents.
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Marilyn A. Nippold
Google (United States)
Megan W. Frantz-Kaspar
University of Oregon
Paige M. Cramond
University of Oregon
Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research
University of Oregon
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Nippold et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a10d91fd06b5b96589fa4fa — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1044/2015_jslhr-l-14-0129