Narrative competence among hearing-impaired and normal-hearing children

analytical cross-sectional study

Authors

  • Alexandra Dezani Soares Universidade Federal de São Paulo
  • Bárbara Niegia Garcia de Goulart Universidade Federal de São Paulo
  • Brasilia Maria Chiari Universidade Federal de São Paulo

Keywords:

Hearing loss, Narration, Language disorders, Communication disorders, Speech-language pathology

Abstract

CONTEXT AND OBJECTIVE: Oral narrative is a means of language development assessment. However, standardized data for deaf patients are scarce. The aim here was to compare the use of narrative competence between hearing-impaired and normal-hearing children. DESIGN AND SETTING: Analytical cross-sectional study at the Department of Speech-Language and Hearing Sciences, Universidade Federal de São Paulo. METHODS: Twenty-one moderately to profoundly bilaterally hearing-impaired children (cases) and 21 normal-hearing children without language abnormalities (controls), matched according to sex, age, schooling level and school type, were studied. A board showing pictures in a temporally logical sequence was presented to each child, to elicit a narrative, and the child’s performance relating to narrative structure and cohesion was measured. The frequencies of variables, their associations (Mann-Whitney test) and their 95% confidence intervals was analyzed. RESULTS: The deaf subjects showed poorer performance regarding narrative structure, use of connectives, cohesion measurements and general punctuation (P ≤ 0.05). There were no differences in the number of propositions elaborated or in referent specification between the two groups. The deaf children produced a higher proportion of orientation-related propositions (P = 0.001) and lower proportions of propositions relating to complicating actions (P = 0.015) and character reactions (P = 0.005). CONCLUSION: Hearing-impaired children have abnormalities in different aspects of language, involving form, content and use, in relation to their normal-hearing peers. Narrative competence was also associated with the children’s ages and the school type.

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Author Biographies

Alexandra Dezani Soares, Universidade Federal de São Paulo

MSc. Speech-language pathologist, Hospital São Paulo, Universidade Federal de São Paulo (Unifesp), São Paulo, Brazil.

Bárbara Niegia Garcia de Goulart, Universidade Federal de São Paulo

PhD. Speech-language pathologist, Universidade Federal de São Paulo (Unifesp), São Paulo, and adjunct professor, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul (UFRGS), Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil.

Brasilia Maria Chiari, Universidade Federal de São Paulo

PhD. Full professor, Department of Speech-Hearing Sciences, Universidade Federal de São Paulo (Unifesp), São Paulo, Brazil.

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Published

2010-09-09

How to Cite

1.
Soares AD, Goulart BNG de, Chiari BM. Narrative competence among hearing-impaired and normal-hearing children: analytical cross-sectional study. Sao Paulo Med J [Internet]. 2010 Sep. 9 [cited 2025 Oct. 16];128(5):284-8. Available from: https://periodicosapm.emnuvens.com.br/spmj/article/view/1811

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Original Article