Abstract

Children with language disorder frequently experience difficulties with vocabulary acquisition, and these difficulties often persist into adolescence. The literature indicates that clinical studies tend to investigate phonological-semantic approaches, whereas educational studies focus on the derivation of meaning within a literacy context. Little is known about whether the practices of speech and language therapists and teachers reflect these findings from the literature. The current paper reports on a survey which gathered information from speech and language therapists and mainstream secondary school teachers, about their current practice concerning vocabulary support for adolescents, aged 11–16, who have language disorder. An online questionnaire was distributed through teaching and speech and language therapy professional networks. The aim of the study was to establish which specific strategies were used in practice by speech and language therapists and mainstream secondary school teachers to teach vocabulary to adolescents with language disorder, and which strategies were the most effective. Responses were obtained from 127 speech and language therapists and 47 mainstream secondary school teachers in the UK. Speech and language therapists were more likely than mainstream secondary school teachers to teach phonological awareness and semantic feature analysis as strategies for developing vocabulary skills. Both professions used literacy-related strategies as well as strategies for independent word learning such as the derivation of meaning from morphology and context. Increased joint working and training opportunities would further develop the knowledge and skills of both mainstream secondary school teachers and speech and language therapists, enabling theoretically-grounded and relevant vocabulary support for this group of adolescents.

Highlights

  • It is well established that vocabulary knowledge plays a critical role in academic progress

  • The goal of the current paper is to investigate the current practice of speech and language therapists (SLTs) and mainstream secondary school teachers (MSSTs) concerning vocabulary support for adolescents aged 11–16 who have language disorder

  • The current paper aims to answer the following research question: for adolescents with language disorder, do the vocabulary teaching practices of MSSTs and SLTs differ? Evidence from the literature leads to the following hypotheses: (H1) SLTs are more likely than MSSTs to teach phonological awareness; (H2) SLTs are more likely than MSSTs to teach semantic feature analysis; (H3) MSSTs are more likely than SLTs to use literacy-related strategies; and (H4) MSSTs are more likely than SLTs to teach the use of morphological and contextual clues for independent word learning

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Summary

Introduction

It is well established that vocabulary knowledge plays a critical role in academic progress. Vocabulary knowledge both in early childhood (Croll, 1995) and in the adolescent years (Spencer, Clegg, Stackhouse, and Rush, 2017) is positively correlated with examination success. Up to 10% of children have disordered language development (Norbury et al, 2016), frequently presenting with deficits in vocabulary acquisition, which continue throughout adolescence (McGregor et al, 2013). Children with language disorder are known to be at risk of poor long-term outcomes in a range of academic, social, emotional, health and employment domains, well into adulthood (Johnson et al, 2010)

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