Oral Narration of African American Students in General and Gifted Education Programs
Mills, Monique Tenette
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https://hdl.handle.net/2142/72381
Description
Title
Oral Narration of African American Students in General and Gifted Education Programs
Author(s)
Mills, Monique Tenette
Issue Date
2008
Doctoral Committee Chair(s)
Watkins, Ruth V.
Department of Study
Speech and Hearing Science
Discipline
Speech and Hearing Science
Degree Granting Institution
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Degree Name
Ph.D.
Degree Level
Dissertation
Keyword(s)
Health Sciences, Speech Pathology
Education, Special
Education, Curriculum and Instruction
Abstract
This mixed methods study sought to better understand potential sources of underrepresentation African American children in gifted education programs. The differences in oral narration among 50 students in general and gifted education programs, grades two through five, were investigated. Students produced audiotaped oral narratives based on a wordless book, Frog, Where Are You?, and on child-friendly story prompts. Stories were analyzed for rhetorical feature, morpho-syntactic African American English (AAE) feature, lexical diversity (NDW), and general language production (MLU, TNU, TNW). A culturally-fair standardized language assessment battery was administered including the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test-4, Expressive Vocabulary Test-2, and the Diagnostic Evaluation of Language Variation-Screening Test to more fully describe language skill. All 50 students and 15 teachers were interviewed to better understand perceptions of good storytelling and of verbal intelligence. Quantitative data suggested that group differences existed based on story type and educational placement. Students in the gifted education program tended to produce higher rates of lexical diversity and general language measures as well as standard measures of vocabulary. Students in the general education program tended to produce higher rates of AAE. These findings suggested that heavy reliance on certain verbal measures and a particular verbal profile may contribute to the underrepresentation of African American students in gifted education programs. Students and teachers perceived of individuals with good storytelling and verbal intelligence as communicating within and across three modes: associative, informative, and performative. The in-depth observation of one student suggested that oral narratives may be useful as an index of verbal intelligence.
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