School of Psychology and Public Health, La Trobe University, Bundoora, VIC, Australia.
Melbourne Graduate School of Education, The University of Melbourne, Parkville, VIC, Australia.
Int J Lang Commun Disord. 2021 Mar;56(2):389-401. doi: 10.1111/1460-6984.12611. Epub 2021 Mar 11.
Early reading success is predicated on language and pre-literacy skills. Children who are behind their peers in language and pre-literacy development before formal schooling are less likely to be proficient beginner readers, and difficulties may persist throughout primary school and beyond. We know children experiencing adversity are at greater risk of early language and pre-literacy difficulties; we do not know the prevalence of these difficulties in an Australian adversity context.
To investigate the prevalence and co-occurrence of language and pre-literacy difficulties in a cohort of Australian 5-year-old children experiencing social adversity.
METHODS & PROCEDURES: Data were drawn from a large Australian community-based trial of nurse home visiting (right@home), which aimed to support women experiencing social adversity from pregnancy until their child turned 2 years of age. Social adversity was determined by two of more risk factors: young pregnancy, not living with another adult, no support, poorer health, current smoker, long-term illness, anxious mood, not finishing high school, no household income and no previous employment. Children whose mothers were enrolled in the control group (receiving usual maternal and child healthcare) were included in the current study (n = 359). Language and pre-literacy skills were measured at age 5 using the Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamental Preschool-Second Edition (CELF-P2) and the School Entry Alphabetic and Phonological Awareness Readiness Test (SEAPART). Language difficulties were defined as ≥ 1.25 standard deviations (SD) below the Australian normative mean on CELF-P2 Core Language scores. Pre-literacy difficulties were defined as children scoring in the Beginner (versus Developing or Competent) criterion-referenced level on the SEAPART First Sound Identification and/or Alphabet Letter Identification subtests. Co-occurrence of language and pre-literacy difficulties was also determined.
OUTCOMES & RESULTS: At the 5-year follow-up, 201/359 (56%) children were assessed (mean age = 5.1 years, SD = 0.1). Mean Core Language score for this cohort (91.8, SD = 15.9) was 0.54 SD below the normative mean (100, SD = 15). The proportion of children presenting with language difficulties was 24.9%. Regarding pre-literacy skills, 43.8% of children were 'Beginner' for identifying first sounds and 58.6% for identifying alphabet letters/sounds. There was also considerable overlap whereby 76.7% of children with language difficulties also exhibited pre-literacy difficulties.
CONCLUSIONS & IMPLICATIONS: This is the first empirical Australian-based study highlighting the high prevalence and co-occurrence of language and pre-literacy difficulties in preschool children experiencing social adversity. Clinicians should be aware of co-morbid language and pre-literacy difficulties in disadvantaged populations and consider both areas during assessment and intervention planning. What this paper adds What is already known on the subject The prevalence of language and literacy difficulties is substantially higher in cohorts experiencing social adversity when compared with more advantaged families. There is some evidence that adversity also contributes to pre-literacy difficulties, but less is known here. What this paper adds to existing knowledge This study presents new prevalence data showing high rates of language and pre-literacy difficulties for 5-year-old children experiencing adversity within an Australian context. It is the first to explore these skills in a large cohort of pre-schoolers recruited from community settings in Australia. What are the potential or actual clinical implications of this work? In this cohort experiencing adversity, most children who presented with language difficulties likewise exhibited pre-literacy difficulties. This concordance reflects how early oral language and pre-literacy skills develop together. Clinicians should assess both skills in preschool populations-especially those working with children experiencing adversity-to ensure all children have strong foundations to become proficient beginner readers.
早期阅读的成功取决于语言和读写前技能。在正式入学前,语言和读写前发展落后于同龄人的儿童,成为熟练初学者阅读者的可能性较小,而且困难可能会持续到整个小学阶段甚至更久。我们知道,经历逆境的儿童更有可能面临早期语言和读写前的困难;我们不知道在澳大利亚逆境环境中这些困难的普遍程度。
调查在经历社会逆境的澳大利亚 5 岁儿童群体中,语言和读写前困难的发生率和共现情况。
数据来自一项大型澳大利亚社区护士家访(right@home)的临床试验,该试验旨在支持从怀孕到孩子 2 岁期间经历社会逆境的妇女。社会逆境通过两个或更多风险因素来确定:年轻怀孕、不与另一个成年人生活在一起、没有支持、健康状况较差、当前吸烟者、长期患病、焦虑情绪、未完成高中学业、没有家庭收入和没有以前的就业。其母亲被纳入对照组(接受常规母婴保健)的儿童也被纳入本研究(n=359)。使用临床评估语言基础学前第二版(CELF-P2)和学校入学字母和语音意识准备测试(SEAPART),在 5 岁时测量语言和读写前技能。语言困难定义为 CELF-P2 核心语言分数低于澳大利亚正常均值 1.25 个标准差。读写前困难定义为在 SEAPART 第一声音识别和/或字母字母识别子测试中得分处于初学者(与发展中或熟练者相比)标准参照水平的儿童。还确定了语言和读写前困难的共现情况。
在 5 岁的随访中,有 201/359(56%)名儿童接受了评估(平均年龄=5.1 岁,SD=0.1)。该队列的平均核心语言分数(91.8,SD=15.9)比正常均值(100,SD=15)低 0.54 个标准差。有语言困难的儿童比例为 24.9%。关于读写前技能,43.8%的儿童在识别第一声音方面处于“初学者”水平,58.6%的儿童在识别字母/声音方面处于“初学者”水平。还有相当大的重叠,即 76.7%有语言困难的儿童也有读写前困难。
这是第一项在澳大利亚进行的实证研究,强调了在经历社会逆境的学龄前儿童中,语言和读写前困难的高发生率和共现情况。临床医生应该意识到弱势人群中语言和读写前困难的共病情况,并在评估和干预计划中考虑这两个方面。这篇论文在现有知识基础上增加了什么?目前关于这个主题的已知信息语言和读写困难的发生率在经历社会逆境的群体中明显高于更有利的家庭。有一些证据表明逆境也会导致读写前的困难,但在这方面知之甚少。这篇论文在现有的知识基础上增加了什么新的内容?本研究提供了新的流行数据,显示了在澳大利亚背景下,经历逆境的 5 岁儿童语言和读写前困难的高发生率。这是第一个在澳大利亚社区环境中对大量学龄前儿童进行的关于这些技能的研究。
潜在或实际的临床意义是什么?在经历逆境的队列中,大多数有语言困难的儿童也有读写前困难。这种一致性反映了早期口语语言和读写前技能是如何一起发展的。在学龄前儿童中,临床医生应该评估这两项技能——尤其是那些为经历逆境的儿童服务的临床医生——以确保所有儿童都有成为熟练初学者阅读者的坚实基础。