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Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders Vol.54 383-394 August 1989.
© American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

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Using Structured Discourse as a Language Intervention Technique with Autistic Children

Nancy J. Scherer 1 and Lesley B. Olswang 2

1 Providence Speech and Hearing Center, Orange, CA
2 University of Washington, Seattle

A structured discourse strategy, employing child echoic imitations and adult expansion, was used to teach 5 autistic children two-term semantic relations. The 5 male preschoolers in late Stage I of linguistic development were exposed systematically to two-term semantic relations in a structured dialogue with a clinician. A combined multiple baseline and AB(A) design was used to examine the relationship between the clinician expansions and the children's subsequent spontaneous imitations and spontaneous productions. The results showed that an increase in modeling and expansion was related to an increase in the children's initial spontaneous imitations of two-term relations. Further, following the increase in spontaneous imitations, spontaneous productions of the two-term relations increased and were maintained, whereas spontaneous imitations subsequently decreased.

Submitted on May 26, 1988
Accepted on August 17, 1988




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