Narrative reconstruction in deaf and hearing children: A comparative study in the context of Arabic diglossia

IF 1.8 3区 医学 Q2 AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY Journal of Communication Disorders Pub Date : 2024-08-08 DOI:10.1016/j.jcomdis.2024.106454
Dr. Hashemiah Almusawi, Dr. Bader Alqallaf, Dr. Amnah Hafsyan
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Abstract

This study explores the narrative skills of deaf and hearing children within the context of Arabic diglossia, a linguistic environment characterised by significant differences between spoken dialects and formal written language. Using Stein and Glenn's (1979) and Bruner's (1991) frameworks, the research analyses the narrative constructions of 13 hearing and 13 deaf children in Kuwait. The findings reveal that hearing children, benefiting from consistent exposure to spoken and formal Arabic, produced more coherent and detailed narratives compared to deaf children. Hearing participants also demonstrated greater vocabulary diversity. Age-related improvements in narrative skills were more pronounced among hearing children, while the impact of sign language exposure on narrative abilities was significant among deaf children. The study underscores the critical role of early language exposure and educational support in fostering narrative development, particularly in a diglossic context. These findings highlight the need for specialised educational strategies to support the unique narrative development needs of deaf children.

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聋哑儿童和健听儿童的叙事重建:阿拉伯语失语背景下的比较研究
本研究探讨了聋哑儿童和健听儿童在阿拉伯语 "失语症"(一种以方言口语和正式书面语之间的显著差异为特征的语言环境)背景下的叙事技能。研究采用 Stein 和 Glenn(1979 年)以及 Bruner(1991 年)的框架,分析了科威特 13 名听力儿童和 13 名聋儿的叙事结构。研究结果表明,与聋哑儿童相比,听力儿童由于持续接触阿拉伯语口语和正规阿拉伯语,他们的叙述更加连贯和详细。听力参与者还表现出更大的词汇多样性。与年龄相关的叙事能力提高在听力儿童中更为明显,而手语接触对叙事能力的影响在聋哑儿童中非常显著。这项研究强调了早期语言接触和教育支持在促进叙事能力发展中的关键作用,尤其是在双语环境中。这些研究结果突出表明,有必要制定专门的教育策略,以支持聋哑儿童独特的叙事能力发展需求。
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来源期刊
Journal of Communication Disorders
Journal of Communication Disorders AUDIOLOGY & SPEECH-LANGUAGE PATHOLOGY-REHABILITATION
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
5.90%
发文量
71
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Communication Disorders publishes original articles on topics related to disorders of speech, language and hearing. Authors are encouraged to submit reports of experimental or descriptive investigations (research articles), review articles, tutorials or discussion papers, or letters to the editor ("short communications"). Please note that we do not accept case studies unless they conform to the principles of single-subject experimental design. Special issues are published periodically on timely and clinically relevant topics.
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