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Research Reports

Comprehension problems in children with specific language impairment: does mental imagery training help?

, &
Pages 648-664 | Received 26 Jun 2006, Accepted 25 Oct 2006, Published online: 03 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Background: Children with specific language impairment experience story comprehension deficits. Research with typically developing children, poor comprehenders and poor readers has shown that the use of mental imagery aids in the comprehension of stories.

Aims: To evaluate the effectiveness of an intervention programme in the use of mental imagery to improve the literal and inferential comprehension of children with specific language impairment.

Methods & Procedures: Nine children with specific language impairment were trained to produce mental images for sentences and stories in five 30‐min sessions. Their ability to answer literal and inferential questions about short narratives was assessed pre‐ and post‐intervention and compared with the performance of 16 same‐age typically developing controls.

Outcome & Results: The intervention improved the question–answering performance of the children with specific language impairment for both literal and inferential questions: the improvement was only significant for the literal questions.

Conclusions: The findings demonstrate that a relatively short intervention in the use of mental imagery is an effective way to boost the story comprehension of children with specific language impairment.

Notes

1. The range of scores is reported in . One child in the TD group was performing at ceiling (28/28) on the inferential questions at pre‐test, but the child was not at the ceiling on the literal questions. Another children in the TD group obtained 26/28 on both question types at pre‐test. A reanalysis of the data excluding these children resulted in exactly the same pattern of significant main effects and interactions. The authors are confident that the results are not simply due to ceiling performance by the TD group at pre‐test restricting their room for improvement in performance.

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