What is it about?

Abstract "there-and-then" language use, such as talking about past events, pretend scenarios, and cause-and-effect reasoning, emerges during the preschool years. We recorded and analyzed play sessions between preschoolers with Developmental Language Disorder or autism spectrum disorder and speech-language pathology graduate students.

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Why is it important?

This study is the first to examine "there-and-then" decontextualized talk between preschoolers with language disorders and non-parent adults. Some important findings include that: a) nearly all children engaged in decontextualized talk in roughly half of their conversation turns, b) children's individual language ability (particularly vocabulary diversity) predicted conversation participation more strongly than diagnostic category, and c) a simple clinician strategy of repeating back what children said explained 66% of the variance in children's sentence length during sessions. Our findings suggest that clinicians and graduate training programs can consider incorporating decontextualized talk strategies and responsive techniques like repetition while working with preschoolers with language disorders during play-based sessions.

Perspectives

Writing this article was a true pleasure, as it gave us the opportunity to shine a light on an understudied group in clinical research: preservice speech-language pathologists. I hope this article sparks interest in studying preservice clinicians as a unique and important population, and encourages graduate training programs to reflect on how student clinicians engage children with language disorders in meaningful conversation from the very start of their clinical journey.

Laura Xiaoqian Guo
University of Hawai'i at Manoa

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Beyond the Here and Now: Decontextualized Language Use in Conversations Between Preservice Speech-Language Pathologists and Preschoolers With Language Impairment, Journal of Speech Language and Hearing Research, April 2026, American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA),
DOI: 10.1044/2026_jslhr-25-00014.
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