Narrative Skills of Bilingual Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder

The study investigated how narratives are influenced by both autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and bilingualism. We analyzed the short narratives of school-age Quebec French-speaking children: bilinguals with and without ASD, and monolinguals with and without ASD. Children...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Huong Hoang, Ana Maria Gonzalez-Barrero, Aparna Nadig
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Presses universitaires de Caen 2018-12-01
Series:Discours
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/discours/9856
id doaj-2f3383efb1144cca8d12ccf74689d1ba
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2f3383efb1144cca8d12ccf74689d1ba2020-11-25T01:38:42ZengPresses universitaires de CaenDiscours 1963-17232018-12-012310.4000/discours.9856Narrative Skills of Bilingual Children with Autism Spectrum DisorderHuong HoangAna Maria Gonzalez-BarreroAparna NadigThe study investigated how narratives are influenced by both autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and bilingualism. We analyzed the short narratives of school-age Quebec French-speaking children: bilinguals with and without ASD, and monolinguals with and without ASD. Children were given sets of three picture cards depicting a scenario, and were asked to sequence the cards and tell a story. We measured: (1) language production (number of utterances, total number of words), (2) macrostructure (appropriate sequencing of events, number of events mentioned, coherence), (3) microstructure (character introductions, maintenance of referential terms, use of grammatical gender, use of connectives), and (4) evaluative devices (both linguistic and non-linguistic), and mental state terms. With respect to language production, bilinguals produced more utterances than monolinguals, despite having marginally lower receptive vocabulary scores in French. With respect to macrostructure, typically-developing children provided more coherent narratives. No significant differences were found on microstructure or evaluative devices, but evaluative devices were infrequent for all groups. There were no decrements in the narratives of bilingual children relative to monolingual children, both with and without ASD; in fact we found an increased number of utterances in the narratives of bilinguals. The current findings suggest that bilingualism does not negatively affect narrative skills in children with ASD.http://journals.openedition.org/discours/9856autism spectrum disorder (ASD)bilingualismnarrativepicture-sequencing taskmacrostructuremicrostructure
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Huong Hoang
Ana Maria Gonzalez-Barrero
Aparna Nadig
spellingShingle Huong Hoang
Ana Maria Gonzalez-Barrero
Aparna Nadig
Narrative Skills of Bilingual Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Discours
autism spectrum disorder (ASD)
bilingualism
narrative
picture-sequencing task
macrostructure
microstructure
author_facet Huong Hoang
Ana Maria Gonzalez-Barrero
Aparna Nadig
author_sort Huong Hoang
title Narrative Skills of Bilingual Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
title_short Narrative Skills of Bilingual Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
title_full Narrative Skills of Bilingual Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
title_fullStr Narrative Skills of Bilingual Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
title_full_unstemmed Narrative Skills of Bilingual Children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
title_sort narrative skills of bilingual children with autism spectrum disorder
publisher Presses universitaires de Caen
series Discours
issn 1963-1723
publishDate 2018-12-01
description The study investigated how narratives are influenced by both autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and bilingualism. We analyzed the short narratives of school-age Quebec French-speaking children: bilinguals with and without ASD, and monolinguals with and without ASD. Children were given sets of three picture cards depicting a scenario, and were asked to sequence the cards and tell a story. We measured: (1) language production (number of utterances, total number of words), (2) macrostructure (appropriate sequencing of events, number of events mentioned, coherence), (3) microstructure (character introductions, maintenance of referential terms, use of grammatical gender, use of connectives), and (4) evaluative devices (both linguistic and non-linguistic), and mental state terms. With respect to language production, bilinguals produced more utterances than monolinguals, despite having marginally lower receptive vocabulary scores in French. With respect to macrostructure, typically-developing children provided more coherent narratives. No significant differences were found on microstructure or evaluative devices, but evaluative devices were infrequent for all groups. There were no decrements in the narratives of bilingual children relative to monolingual children, both with and without ASD; in fact we found an increased number of utterances in the narratives of bilinguals. The current findings suggest that bilingualism does not negatively affect narrative skills in children with ASD.
topic autism spectrum disorder (ASD)
bilingualism
narrative
picture-sequencing task
macrostructure
microstructure
url http://journals.openedition.org/discours/9856
work_keys_str_mv AT huonghoang narrativeskillsofbilingualchildrenwithautismspectrumdisorder
AT anamariagonzalezbarrero narrativeskillsofbilingualchildrenwithautismspectrumdisorder
AT aparnanadig narrativeskillsofbilingualchildrenwithautismspectrumdisorder
_version_ 1725052045099008000