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Concordia Publications:

Title Authors PubMed ID
1 Local residents' attitudes toward and contact with international students: a perspective from Montreal, Quebec Tekin O; Trofimovich P; 39606194
EDUCATION
2 Masters students' satisfaction with academic supervision and experiences of mental and emotional distress and wellbeing Nadine S Bekkouche 38848331
EDUCATION
3 Sibling-directed internal state language, perspective taking, and affective behavior Howe N; 1786731
EDUCATION
4 "All the sheeps are dead. He murdered them": sibling pretense, negotiation, internal state language, and relationship quality Howe N; Petrakos H; Rinaldi CM; 9499566
EDUCATION
5 "No! The lambs can stay out because they got cozies": constructive and destructive sibling conflict, pretend play, and social understanding Howe N; Rinaldi CM; Jennings M; Petrakos H; 12361312
EDUCATION
6 "This is a bad dog, you know...": constructing shared meanings during sibling pretend play Howe N; Petrakos H; Rinaldi CM; LeFebvre R; 16026496
EDUCATION
7 Playmates and teachers: reciprocal and complementary interactions between siblings Howe N; Recchia H; 16402864
EDUCATION
8 What do second language listeners know about spoken words? Effects of experience and attention in spoken word processing Pavel Trofimovich 18330706
EDUCATION
9 Parents' reading-related knowledge and children's reading acquisition Ladd M; Martin-Chang S; Levesque K; 21678121
EDUCATION
10 "Two for flinching": children's and adolescents' narrative accounts of harming their friends and siblings Recchia H; Wainryb C; Pasupathi M; 23432540
EDUCATION
11 A pan-theoretical conceptualization of client involvement in psychotherapy Morris E; Fitzpatrick MR; Renaud J; 25017441
EDUCATION
12 Thinking aloud: effects on text comprehension by children with specific language impairment and their peers McClintock B; Pesco D; Martin-Chang S; 25180778
EDUCATION
13 Sibling relationships as sources of risk and resilience in the development and maintenance of internalizing and externalizing problems during childhood and adolescence Dirks MA; Persram R; Recchia HE; Howe N; 26254557
EDUCATION
14 Research as intervention? Exploring the health and well-being of children and youth facing global adversity through participatory visual methods D' Amico M; Denov M; Khan F; Linds W; Akesson B; 27043374
EDUCATION
15 PREDICTING NORMATIVE AND PROBLEMATIC FAMILY PATHWAYS TO THE TRANSITION TO SIBLINGHOOD: COMMENTARY ON VOLLING ET AL.'S MONOGRAPH Nina Howe 28766782
EDUCATION
16 Deserve's Got Nothin' to Do With It: A Philosopher Visits the NICU David I Waddington 30214922
EDUCATION
17 Parental autonomy support in relation to preschool aged children's behavior: Examining positive guidance, negative control, and responsiveness Linkiewich D; Martinovich VV; Rinaldi CM; Howe N; Gokiert R; 33691509
EDUCATION
18 Effect of mindfulness-based programmes on elite athlete mental health: a systematic review and meta-analysis Myall K; Montero-Marin J; Gorczynski P; Kajee N; Syed Sheriff R; Bernard R; Harriss E; Kuyken W; 36223914
EDUCATION
19 Transcoding of French numbers for first- and second-language learners in third grade Lafay A; Adrien E; Lonardo Burr SD; Douglas H; Provost-Larocque K; Xu C; LeFevre JA; Maloney EA; Osana HP; Skwarchuk SL; Wylie J; 37129448
EDUCATION
20 Verbal and nonverbal disagreement in an ELF academic discussion task Liu C; McDonough K; Trofimovich P; Uludag P; 38221977
EDUCATION
21 Assessing pragmatics in early childhood with the Language Use Inventory across seven languages Pesco D; O' Neill DK; 37408974
EDUCATION
22 Integration of visual context in early and late bilingual language processing: evidence from eye-tracking Abashidze D; Schmidt A; Trofimovich P; Mercier J; 37179896
EDUCATION
23 Curriculum-Based Dynamic Assessment of Narratives for Bilingual Filipino Children Laurie A; Pesco D; 36716397
EDUCATION
24 Links Between Adolescents' Moral Mindsets and Narratives of their Inconsistent and Consistent Moral Value Experiences Scirocco A; Recchia H; 36123582
EDUCATION
25 War and reintegration for girls and young women in northern Uganda: A scoping review Savard M; Michaelsen S; 34479000
EDUCATION
26 Vaccination-hesitancy and vaccination-inequality as challenges in Pakistan's COVID-19 response Perveen S; Akram M; Nasar A; Arshad-Ayaz A; Naseem A; 34217150
EDUCATION

 

Title:Thinking aloud: effects on text comprehension by children with specific language impairment and their peers
Authors:McClintock BPesco DMartin-Chang S
Link:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25180778/
DOI:10.1111/1460-6984.12081
Publication:International journal of language & communication disorders
Keywords:inferencingnarrative comprehensionspecific language impairmentthink-aloud
PMID:25180778 Category: Date Added:2014-09-03
Dept Affiliation: EDUCATION
1 Department of Education, Concordia University, Montreal, QC, Canada.

Description:

Background: Many lines of evidence now suggest that inferencing plays a substantial role in text comprehension. However, inferencing appears to be difficult for children with language impairments, many of whom are also struggling readers.

Aims: To assess the effects of a 'think-aloud' procedure on inference generation and narrative text comprehension by children with expressive-receptive specific language impairment (SLI) and age-matched peers with typical language development (TLD).

Methods & procedures: An SLI group (n = 12; mean age = 10; 5) and an age-matched TLD group (n = 12) participated in the study. Narrative passages were read silently by participants and simultaneously read aloud by the examiner in two conditions: (1) uninterrupted reading and (2) a think-aloud, in which children verbalized their understanding as the text was read. Following the passages in both conditions, children responded to comprehension questions requiring either literal or inferential information (specifically, 'informational' and 'causal' inferences). The children's comprehension scores were analysed by group, condition and question type. The statements children generated during the think-aloud were also compared by group and examined in relation to children's comprehension scores.

Outcomes & results: The SLI group scored lower than the TLD group on all questions (literal, informational and causal), in both conditions. For both groups, however, comprehension scores on all three types of questions increased when the think-aloud procedure was implemented. During the think-aloud, the SLI group generated a comparable number of literal statements compared with the TLD group, but fewer informational and causal statements. The number of causal statements children made correlated with their scores on the inferential comprehension questions.

Conclusions & implications: Children with expressive-receptive SLI showed poorer comprehension of narrative texts than children with TLD, as expected. However, both groups' comprehension improved when participating in the think-aloud condition. While further investigation is warranted, the think-aloud procedure shows promise as a strategy to enhance narrative text comprehension in school-age children with, and without, language impairments.





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