Abstract
The aim of this study was to examine relations between teachers' conversational techniques and language gains made by their deaf and hard-of-hearing students. Specifically, we considered teachers' reformulations of child utterances, language elicitations, explicit vocabulary and syntax instruction, and wait time. This was an observational, longitudinal study that examined the characteristics of teacher talk in 25 kindergarten through second-grade classrooms of 68 deaf and hard-of-hearing children who used spoken English. Standardized assessments provided measures of child vocabulary and morphosyntax in the fall and spring of a school year. Characteristics of teacher talk were coded from classroom video recordings during the winter of that year. Hierarchical linear modeling indicated that reformulating child statements and explicitly teaching vocabulary were significant predictors of child vocabulary gains across a school year. Explicitly teaching vocabulary also significantly predicted gains in morphosyntax abilities. There were wide individual differences in the teachers' use of these conversational techniques. Reformulation and explicit vocabulary instruction may be areas where training can help teachers improve, and improvements in the teachers' talk may benefit their students.
Highlights
The aim of this study was to examine relations between teachers’ conversational techniques and language gains made by their deaf and hard-of-hearing students
This study examined two questions: 1. What are the characteristics of teacher talk in the kindergarten through second grade, spoken language classrooms of deaf and hard-of-hearing (DHH) children?
Prediction of Gains in Child Language The second question posed in this study was, “To what extent does teacher talk predict gains in DHH students’ vocabulary and morphosyntax across a school year?” First, we examined correlations between teacher talk variables with the mean fall and spring vocabulary and morphosyntax scores for each classroom
Summary
The aim of this study was to examine relations between teachers’ conversational techniques and language gains made by their deaf and hard-of-hearing students. Method: This was an observational, longitudinal study that examined the characteristics of teacher talk in 25 kindergarten through second-grade classrooms of 68 deaf and hard-ofhearing children who used spoken English. Research with hearing children indicates that how teachers talk with their students influences child language growth The goal of this study was to examine what characteristics of teacher talk might facilitate DHH students’ spoken language development in kindergarten through second-grade classrooms. L. Rowe, Leech, & Cabrera, 2016), early childhood educators and their students
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