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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.34 129-140 February 1991.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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The Language-Reading Relationship in Normal and Reading-Disabled Children

Lynn S. Snyder 1
Doris M. Downey 2

1 California State University Long Beach
2 University of Colorado, Boulder

In this study, the word retrieval, phonological awareness, sentence completion, and narrative discourse processing skills of 93 reading-disabled and 93 normally achieving subjects from 8 to 14 years of age were compared. The subjects were matched for age, sex, and neighborhood. Results revealed that the two groups differed significantly on the time and accuracy of word retrieval, their ability to produce a syntactically appropriate structure in a sentence completion task, their retelling of stories that had been read to them, their answers to questions about the stories, and their inferences. Further analysis revealed that the variance in the younger reading-disabled children's reading comprehension scores was best accounted for by their performance on the sentence completion and word retrieval measures; the inferencing skills of the older reading-disabled children best accounted for the variance in their reading comprehension. By contrast, the younger normally achieving children's reading comprehension scores were best accounted for by their sentence completion, the proportion of the stories that they retold, and word retrieval scores. The proportion of stories retold and the phonological awareness score of the older normally achieving children best accounted for the variance in their reading scores. These findings suggest that the oral language skills of normally achieving and reading-disabled children may relate differently to their reading comprehension at different age levels.

KEY WORDS: language disorder, reading disability, dyslexia, word retrieval, discourse processing

Submitted on September 1, 1989
Accepted on February 28, 1990


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