Assessing Early Receptive Language Skills in Children With ASD

2016 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 12-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristen Muller ◽  
Nancy Brady

Language assessments play a large role in the diagnosis and treatment of autism spectrum disorders (ASD) because language impairments are often part of an ASD diagnosis and language status is a fundamental prognostic indicator for individuals with ASD. Receptive language forms the foundation for competent expressive language including literacy skills. Information from language assessments is also used to create therapy goals and monitor progress on these goals. Therefore, valid and accurate assessment of receptive language for individuals with ASD is paramount. Current assessments include tasks that are particularly difficult for individuals with ASD and often assess higher-level language skills and not emerging language skills, resulting in floor effects for individuals with ASD. Developing better receptive language measures is an important area for future research. Assessing and treating receptive language impairments will lead to improved expressive communication, including social communication, and literacy skills for individuals with ASD.

2021 ◽  
pp. 65-72
Author(s):  
Arif Siswanto ◽  
Hafidz Triantoro Aji Pratomo ◽  
Muryanti Muryanti ◽  
Windiarti Dwi Purnaningrum

Background: Language and communication skills are essential skills that preschoolers must have. This ability is a precursor to further literacy skills which will later be useful in the academic process of children, so it is necessary to trace the language and communication skills of preschool children.  Methods: This research is a survey research by distributing questionnaires to respondents. The questionnaire contains the profile of language and communication skills through parent reports. The analysis used is using descriptive statistics.  Results: This study provides an overview of language and communication skills in depth. The language component consists of receptive language skills, expressive language skills, and initial literacy skills. Meanwhile, communication skills consist of attention and listening, the ability to follow simple commands, the ability to ask questions, and the ability to speak. About 20% of preschoolers have language skills below their peers.  Conclusion: Data found on language skills of children under their peers. Further research is needed to prove broader data about preschool language skills.


2018 ◽  
Vol 34 (2) ◽  
pp. 101-113 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diane King ◽  
Olympia Palikara

Language abilities in adolescents with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) are variable and can be challenging to ascertain with confidence. This study aimed to compare and evaluate different forms of language assessment: standardized language testing, narrative analysis and parent/teacher reports. 14 adolescents with ASD and 14 typically developing adolescents matched on age, gender and nonverbal ability were assessed using a number of standardized assessments for receptive and expressive language skills, a standardized narrative test, two experimental narrative assessments and a parent/teacher report measure of pragmatics. The findings were that, although adolescents with ASD scored within the normal range on expressive and receptive language, their performance on narrative tasks revealed difficulties with both structural and evaluative language. It should be noted that both teachers and parents rated the pragmatic language skills of the young people with ASD as significantly lower than those of the typically developing group but parents were more likely than teachers to additionally identify difficulties in speech and syntax. The implications of these results for professionals in terms of assessing the language skills of adolescents with ASD and for the planning of appropriate intervention are discussed.


2006 ◽  
Vol 30 (2) ◽  
pp. 126-144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Josephine Infantino ◽  
Kerry Hempenstall

AbstractThis case study examined the effects of a parent-presented Direct Instruction decoding program on the reading and language skills of a child with high functioning Autism Spectrum Disorder. Following the 23 hour intervention, reading comprehension, listening comprehension and fluency skills improved to grade level, whilst statistically significant improvements were also noted in receptive language skills. There were no significant changes in phonological and decoding skills for which various possibilities are explored, including the student’s prior double deficit in phonological skills. The findings are consistent with research suggesting that increased intervention intensity, along with greater emphasis on phonological skills may be necessary to advance the decoding skills of children displaying a double deficit. The reading and language outcomes were sufficiently promising to warrant further studies employing methodologically sound group designs with this population.


Autism ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 24 (6) ◽  
pp. 1384-1399 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rachelle Wicks ◽  
Jessica Paynter ◽  
Marleen F Westerveld

Visual attention and active engagement during shared book reading are important for facilitating emergent literacy learning during the preschool years. Children on the autism spectrum often show difficulties in language and literacy development, yet research investigating potential indicators of shared book reading engagement, including visual attention and verbal engagement, for this group of preschoolers is currently limited. To better understand the relationship between children’s visual attention and verbal engagement during shared book reading, parent shared book reading behaviors, and children’s emergent literacy skills (e.g. receptive vocabulary and letter-name knowledge), we observed 40 preschoolers on the spectrum and their parents sharing an unfamiliar storybook. Videos of the shared book reading interactions were transcribed and coded for child and parent behaviors using observational coding schemes. Strong significant associations were found between children’s visual attention, verbal engagement, and parents’ use of questions and/or prompts during the shared book reading interaction. Contrary to expectations, children’s visual attention was not related to their emergent literacy skills. Overall, our findings emphasize the interplay between parent behaviors and how preschoolers on the spectrum engage in this important literacy-related context and provide directions for future research. Lay abstract Children who have an autism diagnosis often have trouble learning to talk and read. These difficulties become noticeable before children start school and may be linked to lower attention and engagement in literacy-related activities such as sharing storybooks with their parents. To date, few researchers have looked at possible ways to measure how children on the autism spectrum engage during shared storybook reading, for example, where children look or how much they talk, and how this may be related to their letter-name knowledge and their vocabulary knowledge. In this study, we analyzed videos of 40 preschoolers on the spectrum and their parents sharing an unfamiliar storybook. We wanted to see whether where children looked (i.e. toward the storybook, their parent, or elsewhere) and how much they talked were related to what their parents did (e.g. ask questions or provide prompts) and/or children’s letter-name knowledge and vocabulary. The videos were coded for different child and parent behaviors. We found that where children looked and how much they talked were strongly related to each other and what parents did during the shared book reading interaction, particularly asking questions and using prompts. In contrast to what we expected, where children looked was not related to children’s letter or vocabulary knowledge. Overall, results of the study draw attention to the connection between what parents do and what preschoolers on the spectrum do when sharing storybooks and provide directions for future research.


2020 ◽  
pp. 026461962094534
Author(s):  
Cheryl Kamei-Hannan ◽  
Ya-Chih Chang ◽  
Mitch Fryling

Tactile object boxes, object walks, and object experience books are common practices that are recommended for children with visual impairment to promote language development and early literacy skills. However, there is limited research on the effectiveness of these practices leading to variations of how these practices are implemented in the classrooms. This pilot study examined the effectiveness of a multisensory storytelling approach on listening comprehension and language use in three bilingual children with visual impairment. The results suggest that the multisensory storytelling approach is a promising intervention for children with visual impairment in increasing their language skills but there were differential effects based on child characteristic differences. Implications for practice and directions for future research toward language assessments and implementation of the multisensory storytelling approached are discussed.


Autism ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 23 (8) ◽  
pp. 2131-2144 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniela Plesa Skwerer ◽  
Briana Brukilacchio ◽  
Andrea Chu ◽  
Brady Eggleston ◽  
Steven Meyer ◽  
...  

Attending preferentially to social information in the environment is important in developing socio-communicative skills and language. Research using eye tracking to explore how individuals with autism spectrum disorder deploy visual attention has increased exponentially in the past decade; however, studies have typically not included minimally verbal participants. In this study, we compared 37 minimally verbal children and adolescents with autism spectrum disorder with 34 age-matched verbally fluent individuals with autism spectrum disorder in how they viewed a brief video in which a young woman, surrounded by interesting objects, engages the viewer, and later reacts with expected or unexpected gaze-shifts toward the objects. While both groups spent comparable amounts of time looking at different parts of the scene and looked longer at the person than at the objects, the minimally verbal autism spectrum disorder group spent significantly less time looking at the person’s face during the episodes where gaze following—a precursor of joint attention—was critical for interpreting her behavior. Proportional looking-time toward key areas of interest in some episodes correlated with receptive language measures. These findings underscore the connections between social attention and the development of communicative abilities in autism spectrum disorder.


2018 ◽  
Vol 38 (2) ◽  
pp. 82-93 ◽  
Author(s):  
Veronica P. Fleury ◽  
Erin M. Lease

In this pilot study, we describe emergent literacy skills and factors related to literacy for children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD). A total of 38 parents and their children ( n = 18 with ASD; n = 20 typically developing) participated in this study. Our analyses revealed great variability in emergent literacy performance across the ASD sample, with many children demonstrating strengths in code-focused skills combined with difficulties with focused-meaning skills. Moderate to strong correlations were found between emergent literacy skills and indices of communication and cognition for the children with ASD. Although we did not detect overall group differences in parental beliefs related to literacy, moderate to robust relationships were identified between parental attitudes about literacy and various child developmental indices. Implications for the nature and timing of intervention and future research directions are discussed in light of these findings.


Author(s):  
Lise Reindal ◽  
Terje Nærland ◽  
Bernhard Weidle ◽  
Stian Lydersen ◽  
Ole A. Andreassen ◽  
...  

AbstractPragmatic language impairments are common in neurodevelopmental disorders, especially in autism spectrum disorder (ASD). The relationship between structural language skills and pragmatic competence in children with autistic symptoms, however, is largely unknown. We investigated this relationship based on the Children’s Communication Checklist-2 and early language delay among children (N = 177, 19% females) clinically evaluated for ASD, differentiated into ASD (n = 148) and non-ASD (n = 29). Structural language deficits were common and associated with reduced pragmatic competence in both groups. Pragmatic language impairments were most profound in children with ASD. Early language delay and structural language deficits were less common in females. Our findings suggest that assessment of structural language skills should be included in the evaluation of children with suspected ASD.


2019 ◽  
Vol 124 (5) ◽  
pp. 438-449 ◽  
Author(s):  
Micah O. Mazurek ◽  
Mary Baker-Ericzén ◽  
Stephen M. Kanne

Abstract Despite the importance of expressive language for individuals with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), expressive language assessments are not consistently included in ASD research and many studies do not adequately describe participants' verbal abilities. A valid and efficient measure of expressive language would facilitate consistent reporting across ASD research studies and provide data for additional analyses. The current study developed a new Autism Diagnostic Observation Schedule (ADOS-2) expressive language score and examined convergent and divergent validity in a large, well-defined sample of children with ASD. This score was highly correlated with other measures of expressive language (including parent-report, direct assessment, and clinician ratings) and less strongly correlated with measures of receptive language and nonverbal cognitive ability, providing good evidence of convergent and divergent validity.


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