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Project
Description: Language sampling is a critical component of language assessments. However, there are many ways to elicit language samples that likely impact the results. The purpose of this study was to examine how different discourse types and elicitation tasks affect various language sampling outcomes.
Project
Description: The aim of this research is to create developmentally appropriate, play-based storytelling elicitation procedures to collect language samples of young children aged 18-48 months, tools for evaluating the magnitude and quality of narrative language produced in play-based storytelling sessions, and examine the psychometric properties of these new
Project
Description: In research, augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) interventions have primarily focused on teaching children to make requests (Logan et al., 2017); however, AAC intervention should not stop there.
Project
Description: Science of reading experts have called for increased attention on oral academic language. Specifically, interventions need to integrate multiple dimensions of academic language—word-, sentence-, and discourse-level patterns—to impact listening comprehension.
Dataset
Part of Project: Impact of Discourse Type and Elicitation Task on Language Sampling Outcomes
Description: These are the data for 1037 K-3 students who contributed oral academic language samples. https://doi.org/10.1044/2023_AJSLP-22-00365
Dataset
Part of Project: AAC Narrative Intervention for Children with Autism
Description: These are the data for story grammar scores and number of different symbols used that resulted from the AAC narrative intervention. They are organized according to multiple baseline across participants design and pseudonyms are used instead of children's names.
Dataset
Part of Project: Oral Academic Narrative Language Intervention
Description: This file contains data according to two research designs: small scale RCT and a Repeated Acquisition Design (single case research). The vocabulary at the pre- and post- collections were untaught words whereas the weekly probes for the RAD were the taught words of that week.