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For many
reasons, young children with disabilities have difficulty learning to
talk. This project focuses on the role of language intervention in communication
development of young children who are not talking.
There are
three phases in the study: pre-intervention, intervention, and post-intervention.
During the pre-intervention phase, the participating children will be
given an assessment battery that includes descriptive, cognitive, communicative,
and family measures. In the intervention phase, the children will be randomly
assigned to one of the three interventions to determine the effects of
two different types of experimental language interventions versus an established
oral communication intervention. In each intervention, the child and parent
will participate in two 30-minute sessions per week across a 12-week period.
Nine of the 12 weeks of intervention will be conducted at the GSU office
with the remaining three weeks conducted at the childs home. In
the Post-Intervention phase, measures of communication, adaptive behavior,
parent perception, and education placement will be given at 3-, 6-, and
12-month intervals.
Over
the four-year period (until August 2004), the project staff will continuously
recruit a total of 60 children and their families to participate. In addition
to receiving 12 weeks of free language intervention, the children and
families will also receive free of charge the following: developmental
and language testing both pre- and post-intervention, intervention sessions
that are geared toward teaching families how to implement language intervention
in the home environment, parking for visits conducted at GSU, and intervention
materials.
from the Toddler Language Intervention abstract
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