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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Communication Deviances and Clarity Among the Mothers of Normally Achieving and Learning-Disabled Boys.
Anna-maija PoikkeusMarja-leena LaaksoPaula LyytinenHelena Rasku-puttonenTimo Ahonensubject
AdultMaleSocial PsychologyTask (project management)law.inventionDevelopmental psychologylawCommunication disordermedicineHumansAttentionChildAssociation (psychology)Problem SolvingParentingLearning DisabilitiesVerbal BehaviorCommunicationmedicine.diseaseMother-Child RelationsSocial relationClinical PsychologyEl NiñoLearning disabilityCLARITYEducational StatusFamily TherapyFemalemedicine.symptomPsychologyLearning disabledSocial Sciences (miscellaneous)description
The main purpose of the study was to reexamine the association between maternal communication deviances and learning disabilities in children. In this study, we adapted and extended the procedure used by Ditton, Green, and Singer (1987). A two-part experimental task was used: one in which the child could not request any clarification of mother's instructions, and another in which the mother and child could communicate. Both communication deviances and the clarity of mothers' communication were analyzed. The subjects were 60 mother-child pairs in which half of the children had learning disabilities and the other half were normally achieving children matched for age and parents' SES. The dyads were videotaped in a laboratory setting. The mothers of learning-disabled (LD) children were found to give less exact instructions and to present more ambiguous messages to the child than the mothers of non-LD children. Despite the more inaccurate input from their mother, the LD boys did not request clarification for ambiguous statements any more than did the NLD boys.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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1994-03-01 | Family Process |