Abstract

AbstractKnowing what the more important skills are for particular communicative contexts potentially increases the odds of communicative and, therefore, social success in those contexts. This is particularly necessary for adolescents, as successful peer relationships are significant factors in their maturation. Previous investigations about adolescents' perceptions of what are more and less important communication skills for positive peer relationships have used a paper-pencil task with normally achieving (NA) adolescents in which they read statements describing 14 communication skills and ranked them according to importance or an index card-sorting approach (Q-sort) with adolescents with language impairment (LI) in which the statements for the communication skills were written at a lower reading level. No research has yet compared NA adolescents' rankings of importance on the two different tasks. Therefore, the current study explored the question of whether or not similar rankings of importance would be ...

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