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Journal of Speech and Hearing Research Vol.34 858-865 August 1991.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Communication and Socialization Skills at Ages 2 and 3 in "Late-Talking" Young Children

Rhea Paul 1
Shawn Spangle Looney 2

Pamela S. Dahm 3

1 Portland State University, Portland, OR
2 Portland Public Schools Portland, OR
3 Portland Center for Hearing and Speech Portland, OR

Twenty-one apparently normal children between 18 and 34 months of age with slow expressive language acquisition were compared to a group of normally speaking children matched for age, SES, and sex ratio, on the Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales (Sparrow, Balla, & Cicchetti, 1984) The late talkers (LTs) scored significantly lower not only in expressive communication, but also in receptive communication and socialization. A follow-up study of the same subjects, seen at age 3, showed nearly half the 3-year-olds with a history of LT remained delayed in expressive communication and socialization, while one third remained behind in receptive language. The data suggest that social skills are particularly vulnerable to disruption in children with late expressive language development, even after communication skills have moved into the normal range. They suggest, further, that receptive deficits do not seem, in themselves, to increase the risk of continued language delay Clinical implications of these findings are discussed.

KEY WORDS: toddlers, language delay, communication, socialization, adaptive behavior

Submitted on January 29, 1990
Accepted on October 15, 1990


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