40 Participants Needed

Sentence Recast for Language Developmental Disorders

Age: < 18
Sex: Any
Trial Phase: Academic
Sponsor: University of Houston
No Placebo GroupAll trial participants will receive the active study treatment (no placebo)

What You Need to Know Before You Apply

What is the purpose of this trial?

This trial aims to help young bilingual children with Developmental Language Disorder (DLD) improve their language skills. Researchers are exploring whether therapy in one language (Spanish or English) or a mix of both languages proves more effective. The treatment uses a technique called Sentence Recast, where a speech therapist aids children by repeating sentences in a slightly different form to enhance understanding. The trial seeks emergent bilingual children, aged 4 to 6, who already speak simple sentences in Spanish or English and have experienced language challenges noted by parents or schools. Participants should also have basic hearing abilities and average nonverbal intelligence. As an unphased trial, this study offers a unique opportunity for children to receive innovative language support tailored to their bilingual needs.

Will I have to stop taking my current medications?

The trial information does not specify whether participants need to stop taking their current medications.

What prior data suggests that this method is safe for children with Developmental Language Disorder?

Research has shown that Sentence Recast therapy is generally safe and well-tolerated for children with language developmental disorders. Studies have found that this therapy helps children learn grammar more effectively than other methods. A trained speech language pathologist (SLP) repeats a child's sentence in a corrected form, aiding the child in learning the correct structure.

Although specific safety details for Sentence Recast are not provided in the studies, the therapy does not involve surgery or medication, suggesting a low risk of side effects. Past studies have used it successfully without reports of negative outcomes. This makes it a promising option for improving language skills in children with developmental language disorders, including those who speak more than one language.12345

Why are researchers excited about this trial?

Researchers are excited about Sentence Recast for language developmental disorders because it offers a unique bilingual approach. Unlike traditional monolingual therapies, which typically focus on a single language, this method involves two strategies: monolingual therapy, conducted solely in the child's dominant language, and interleaved therapy, which actively incorporates the child's non-dominant language. This approach aims to enhance language flexibility and engagement by capturing the child's attention and varying linguistic structures. Researchers hope this method will improve language skills more effectively than current standard treatments by making therapy sessions more interactive and personalized.

What evidence suggests that this trial's treatments could be effective for Developmental Language Disorder?

Research has shown that conversational recast treatment helps children with language disorders learn grammar faster and more effectively than other methods. Studies found that recasting, which involves repeating a child's sentence with corrections, outperformed methods that did not use this technique. Early, intensive treatment improved young children's ability to understand and use speech sounds. This trial will compare two approaches: monolingual therapy, where children receive recast therapy in their dominant language, and interleaved therapy, where children receive recast therapy in both their dominant and non-dominant languages. This suggests that both single-language and mixed-language recast therapies could help bilingual children with Developmental Language Disorder improve their language skills.12678

Are You a Good Fit for This Trial?

This trial is for emergent Spanish-English bilingual children in the USA with Developmental Language Disorder (DLD). It aims to help speech language pathologists decide on the best language of intervention. Specific eligibility criteria are not provided, but typically would include a diagnosis of DLD and being bilingual.

Inclusion Criteria

Pass a hearing screening test
Parent concerns and/or a history of receiving services in the public schools
Nonverbal IQ, as measured by the Kaufman Brief Intelligence Test-2, matrices subtest, will be at or above a standard score of 70.
See 3 more

Exclusion Criteria

My child does not have major sensory-motor or psychiatric issues.

Timeline for a Trial Participant

Screening

Participants are screened for eligibility to participate in the trial

2-4 weeks

Treatment

Participants receive monolingual or interleaved therapy for 16 hours over 9 weeks, focusing on recast therapy in the dominant language with opportunities to use the non-dominant language.

9 weeks
Weekly sessions

Follow-up

Participants are monitored for language proficiency and effectiveness of the intervention after treatment.

4 weeks

What Are the Treatments Tested in This Trial?

Interventions

  • Sentence Recast
Trial Overview The study is testing whether monolingual intervention (either in Spanish or English) or an interleaved approach combining both languages can better improve language outcomes for children with DLD. The goal is to enhance academic achievement over time.
How Is the Trial Designed?
2Treatment groups
Experimental Treatment
Group I: Monolingual therapyExperimental Treatment1 Intervention
Group II: Interleaved therapyExperimental Treatment1 Intervention

Find a Clinic Near You

Who Is Running the Clinical Trial?

University of Houston

Lead Sponsor

Trials
155
Recruited
48,600+

National Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)

Collaborator

Trials
377
Recruited
190,000+

University of Delaware

Collaborator

Trials
167
Recruited
25,700+

Published Research Related to This Trial

In a study involving 47 preschool children with developmental language disorder, spontaneous repetition of clinician-modeled morphemes was found to significantly correlate with improved production of those morphemes during treatment.
Children who frequently and correctly repeated targeted morphemes not only showed better performance in using those forms but also had larger treatment effect sizes, suggesting that these repetitions may help them learn and master language structures more effectively.
The Role of Spontaneous Repetitions During Treatment of Morphosyntactic Forms for Children With Developmental Language Disorder.Nicholas, K., Plante, E., Gómez, R., et al.[2023]
The study involved 26 children (13 with developmental language disorders and 13 typically developing) and found that both groups were more accurate in producing subject-focused relative clauses compared to object-focused ones.
Children with developmental language disorders required significantly more practice to achieve consistent performance in producing both types of relative clauses, indicating that while the combined priming and recasting approach is promising, additional support may be necessary for these learners.
The Use of Structural Priming and Focused Recasts to Facilitate the Production of Subject- and Object-Focused Relative Clauses by School-Age Children With and Without Developmental Language Disorder.Wada, R., Gillam, SL., Gillam, RB.[2021]
Enhanced conversational recast treatment effectively improved the correct usage of targeted morphemes in preschoolers with developmental language disorder, regardless of whether they received treatment individually or in a small group setting (n = 20).
However, children in the group condition did not show significant improvement in using their partner's target morpheme, suggesting that simply hearing the target modeled is not enough for learning; active engagement with the recast is crucial for effective treatment.
Individual Versus Small Group Treatment of Morphological Errors for Children With Developmental Language Disorder.Eidsvåg, SS., Plante, E., Oglivie, T., et al.[2023]

Citations

The Efficacy of Recasts in Language InterventionTwo early studies found that recasting produced better results than interventions in which child utterances were not recast (Bradshaw, Hoffman, & Norris, 1998; ...
Sentence Recast Use by Parents of Children With Typical ...Specifically, parents of children with SLI have been shown to produce fewer recasts than do parents of younger children with TL. Because recasts have been shown ...
Effects in language development of young children with ...This study tests the hypothesis that children with LD show progress in their receptive and expressive language during intervention.
Sentence Recast for Language Developmental DisordersResearch shows that conversational recast treatment helps children with language disorders learn grammar more quickly and effectively compared to other methods.
Efficacy of the Treatment of Developmental Language DisorderResults. Early intensive intervention in three- and four-year-old children has a positive effect on phonological expressive and receptive skills ...
Recast Therapy for Treating Syntax in Bilingual Children ...The purpose of this study is to examine the feasibility of the delivery of complex syntax recast therapy via telepractice to Spanish–English bilingual children.
What Matters When Providing Conversational Recast ...Here, we directly compare multiple variations of conversational recasting to determine how modifications to delivery and target impact treatment outcomes.
Efficacy of the Treatment of Developmental Language ...T3 = 6 months after treatment, Primary outcomes: Expressive and receptive language (CASL [119]); backward masking. Secondary outcomes: sentence comprehension ...
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