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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.27 424-429 September 1984.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Symbolic Play in Normal and Language-Impaired Children

Brenda Y. Terrell 1
Richard G. Schwartz 2
Patricia A. Prelock 3

Cheryl K. Messick 2

1 Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, OH
2 Purdue University, West Lafayette, IN
3 Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh, PA

The symbolic play of 15 normally developing (CA, 16–22 months) and 15 language-impaired children (CA, 32–49 months), whose productive language skills were at the single-word utterance level, was compared. Symbolic play was assessed formally through the Symbolic Play Test and informally through the observation of spontaneous play. The language-impaired children were found to be developmentally advanced when compared to the language-matched normal children in the level and direction of their symbolic play. Relative to age norms, however, the language-impaired children evidenced deficits in symbolic play. Thus, their linguistic and symbolic play abilities were not equally impaired. These findings are discussed in terms of their implications for the relationship between symbolic play and language and for the nature of specific language impairment.

Submitted on May 3, 1982
Accepted on May 2, 1984


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