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Do children with developmental delays use more frequent and diverse language in verbal routines?

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Do children with developmental delays use more frequent and diverse language in verbal routines?

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The current study is the first to test the hypotheses that children with developmental delays use more frequent language and more diverse vocabulary in routines than in nonroutines. The 19 child participants were in Brown’s (1973) first stage of language learning. Using a novel method of measuring routines, 18 of the parents identified at least one routine in a videotaped play session with their children. Results support both hypotheses and provide descriptive information about the content of the routines displayed by the parents and children in the free-play context. The importance of replicating the findings in the context of an experimental design before concluding that “routineness” caused the children to talk more often and with more diverse vocabulary was emphasized.

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