ABSTRACT
Competence in spoken discourse is an important consideration during assessment and intervention planning for adolescents with communication difficulties. Currently, a lack of age-appropriate protocols and reference data against which to interpret performance, are barriers when working with this population, particularly those that assess a range of genre and language features. Using a new assessment tool, the Curtin University Discourse Protocol-Adolescent (CUDP-A), this study aimed to collect and describe spoken discourse samples from a large group of adolescents (n = 160), aged 12 to 15 years, recruited to represent a mainstream academic cohort. For each participant, samples of recount (n = 3), expository (n = 3), persuasive (n = 3), and narrative (n = 2) discourse were described using theoretically supported measurements sensitive to micro-linguistic, micro-structural, macro-structural, and super-structural discourse features. Participants also completed a standardized assessment of oral language. Variability was found in micro-linguistic and micro-structural features, with stability seen in macro-structural and super-structural features. Few age- and gender-related differences were observed, while multiple significant correlations between spoken discourse and oral language variables were revealed across the sample. The CUDP-A was successful in eliciting spoken discourse across genres relevant to social and academic contexts, enabling an in-depth description of adolescent discourse. This tool, supported by the reference data, provides a new opportunity to assess spoken discourse skills in adolescents from clinical populations, e.g., acquired brain injury or developmental disorders. Further research is needed to examine factors influencing discourse ability, such as those that may be related to genre, or contextual factors related to the presence of communication partners, with novel tools such as the CUDP-A facilitating this.
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Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank those who assisted with data collection and analysis. Thank you to the participants who contributed their time, and agencies who assisted with recruitment.
Declaration of interest
The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest. This work was funded through the Curtin University School of Occupational Therapy, Social Work, and Speech Pathology, an Australian Postgraduate Award, and Curtin University Postgraduate Scholarship.
Supplementary material
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Notes
1 Four permutations of data were analysed (transformed (log10[x + 1]) and untransformed data sets including and excluding outliers) to determine the effect outliers (Tabachnik & Fidell, Citation2007). Effect sizes and main effects were consistent across data sets. Therefore results of untransformed data including outliers are reported.