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Assessing pragmatic skills using checklists with children who are deaf and hard of hearing: a systematic review
journal contribution
posted on 2019-07-01, 00:00 authored by Dianne Toe, Louise PaatschLouise Paatsch, A SzarkowskiThis paper investigates the use of checklists to assess pragmatics in children and adolescents who are deaf and hard of hearing. A systematic literature review was undertaken to identify all of the published research articles between 1979 and 2018 on the topic of the assessment of pragmatics for this population of children and adolescents. The 67 papers identified in this review were analyzed and all papers that utilized a checklist to assess pragmatic skills were identified. Across the 18 different published papers on the use of pragmatic skills among children who are deaf and hard of hearing, nine checklists were identified. These nine checklists were then compared and contrasted on six key features including identification of a theoretical framework or model; the type of pragmatic skills measured; the age range of the child assessed; the information/outputs generated; the primary informant for the assessment; and reliability, validity, and normative data. The resulting analysis provides a comprehensive guide to aid clinicians, educators, and researchers in selecting an appropriate checklist to assess pragmatic skills for children and adolescents who are deaf and hard of hearing.
History
Journal
Journal of deaf studies and deaf educationVolume
24Issue
3Pagination
189 - 200Publisher
Oxford University PressLocation
Oxford, Eng.Publisher DOI
eISSN
1465-7325Language
engPublication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2019, The Author(s)Usage metrics
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Categories
Keywords
checklistspragmaticschildrenadolescentsdeaf and hard of hearingSocial SciencesScience & TechnologyLife Sciences & BiomedicineEducation, SpecialRehabilitationEducation & Educational ResearchCOCHLEAR IMPLANTSLANGUAGE-DEVELOPMENTCONVERSATIONAL SKILLSYOUNG-CHILDRENSTUDENTSREPAIRMINDassessmentcommunicationlanguage development