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The Use of English Morphology by High-Risk and Learning Disabled Children
107
Citations
25
References
1973
Year
Atypical Language DevelopmentLearning Disabled ChildrenPsycholinguisticsMorphology (Linguistics)Language LearningEnglish MorphologySocial SciencesSecond Language AcquisitionChild LanguageLanguage AcquisitionCognitive DevelopmentLanguage StudiesDisabled ChildrenSpecific Learning DisorderCognitive ScienceMorphologyMorphological RulesLanguage DisorderChild DevelopmentSpecial EducationLinguistics
The application of morphological rules by 10 high-risk and 10 normal children and 12 learning disabled and 12 achieving children were compared. An adaptation of Berko's experimental test of morphology was administered. High-risk and learning disabled children gave significantly fewer correct responses than their controls. For high-risk children, the greatest relative performance differences were for third person singular, progressive, past tense, and adjectival inflections. For learning-disabled children, the greatest relative differences were for third person singular, possessives, and adjectival inflections. It was concluded that high-risk and learning disabled children exhibited differential and qualitatively similar delays in the acquisition of morphological rules.
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