Journal article
Children's, Parents', and Experts' Perception of Speech and Communication
Language, speech & hearing services in schools, Vol.56(4), pp.1042-1053
10/08/2025
DOI: 10.1044/2025_LSHSS-24-00140
PMID: 40664366
Abstract
This study aims to improve our knowledge of how young children with speech sound disorders (SSD) perceive their own speech and communication in comparison with typically developing (TD) children and how these perceptions relate to parental judgment of communicative participation, intelligibility in different contexts, and an expert measure of children's speech accuracy (percentage of consonants correct in syllable initial position [PCCI]).
Participants were 111 Dutch-speaking children (48-89 months old): 65 with SSD and 46 who were TD. Children's self-reports on the Dutch version of the Communication Attitude Test for Preschool and Kindergarten Children Who Stutter (KiddyCAT-NL) were compared (a) between SSD and TD groups and (b) with the parents' ratings. Parents' ratings were obtained from two parental questionnaires: Focus on the Outcomes of Communication Under Six-34: Dutch (FOCUS-34NL) measuring communicative participation and the Intelligibility in Context Scale: Dutch (ICS-NL). The KiddyCAT-NL, FOCUS-34NL, and ICS-NL outcomes were also compared with (c) speech accuracy measured by speech-language pathologists (SLPs) as the PCCI using the picture-naming task of the Computer Articulation Instrument.
Statistical analysis revealed that young children in the SSD group perceived their speech and communication differently than children in the TD group. Only in the SSD group was there a moderate positive correlation between speech accuracy and intelligibility in context and only a weak correlation with the child's perception of speech and communication. Parents' and children's perceptions were weakly correlated.
Information on children's perception of their own speech is complementary to information obtained from the parents and SLPs' formal assessment of speech accuracy. To fully understand the impact of SSD, it is therefore important to actively elicit and include children's perspectives on speech and communication.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Children's, Parents', and Experts' Perception of Speech and Communication
- Creators
- Anniek van Doornik - University of Applied Sciences UtrechtMarie-Christine Franken - Erasmus MCSharynne McLeod - Charles Sturt UniversityHayo Terband - University of IowaEllen Gerrits - Utrecht University
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- Language, speech & hearing services in schools, Vol.56(4), pp.1042-1053
- DOI
- 10.1044/2025_LSHSS-24-00140
- PMID
- 40664366
- NLM abbreviation
- Lang Speech Hear Serv Sch
- ISSN
- 0161-1461
- eISSN
- 1558-9129
- Publisher
- American Speech-Languge-Hearing Association
- Grant note
- HU University of Applied Sciences Utrecht: DHR\PD-MP\2015-1300-1299-1303 Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research Grant: NWO-VENI-275-89-016
This research was funded by HU University of Applied Sciences Utrecht Grant DHR\PD-MP\2015-1300-1299-1303 (awarded to Anniek van Doornik) and was also supported by the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research Grant NWO-VENI-275-89-016 (awarded to Hayo Terband) . We gratefully thank all participants and their parents/caretakers for their time and effort.
- Language
- English
- Electronic publication date
- 07/15/2025
- Date published
- 10/08/2025
- Academic Unit
- Communication Sciences and Disorders
- Record Identifier
- 9984848110202771
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