Lederberg A R
Department of Educational Foundations, Georgia State University.
Am Ann Deaf. 1991 Mar;136(1):53-9. doi: 10.1353/aad.2012.0507.
This study examined the relationship between deaf preschoolers' language abilities and their play behavior. Twenty-nine deaf children aged three to five years were observed during outdoor free play throughout the school year. Their language abilities varied widely and did not correlate with age. On the basis of two language tests, they were divided into three language ability groups--high, middle, and low. Language ability was found to be related to several aspects of play and social interaction. The children with high language ability were more likely than the other children to play with two partners at the same time (i.e., engage in triadic interaction), to interact with teachers, to prefer to play with children of similar language ability, to use language, and to receive language from their partners. Most of these effects seemed to be due solely to differences between the children with high language ability and those in the other two groups. Children in the low and middle language ability groups behaved similarly. Language ability was not related to any other aspect of peer relations. Thus, the impact of language ability seems limited. These results, in conjunction with past research, suggest that, for the most part, deaf preschoolers' language and social skills develop independently from each other.
本研究考察了失聪学龄前儿童的语言能力与其游戏行为之间的关系。在整个学年的户外自由游戏期间,对29名年龄在3至5岁的失聪儿童进行了观察。他们的语言能力差异很大,且与年龄无关。根据两项语言测试,他们被分为三个语言能力组——高、中、低。研究发现,语言能力与游戏和社交互动的几个方面有关。语言能力高的儿童比其他儿童更有可能同时与两个伙伴一起玩耍(即进行三方互动)、与教师互动、更喜欢与语言能力相似的儿童玩耍、使用语言并从伙伴那里接收语言。这些影响大多似乎仅仅是由于语言能力高的儿童与其他两组儿童之间的差异造成的。语言能力低和中等的儿童表现相似。语言能力与同伴关系的任何其他方面均无关。因此,语言能力的影响似乎有限。这些结果与过去的研究相结合,表明在很大程度上,失聪学龄前儿童的语言和社交技能是相互独立发展的。