2008
DOI: 10.1080/17549500701873920
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A comparison between computer and tabletop delivery of phonology therapy

Abstract: This paper reports on the development and evaluation of a software program aimed at assisting children with phonological impairment. An experimental approach was used whereby children's speech output was assessed pre-and post-therapy. Children were randomly assigned to a computer, a tabletop or a no therapy group. Those children receiving the computer therapy were exposed to an experimental software program that mirrored the tabletop activities using interactive computer games. The results showed no significan… Show more

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Cited by 34 publications
(48 citation statements)
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References 62 publications
(71 reference statements)
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“…This corroborates with the data in the literature that refer that the use of software in speech therapy has revealed positive results 10,28,29 .…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 82%
“…This corroborates with the data in the literature that refer that the use of software in speech therapy has revealed positive results 10,28,29 .…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 82%
“…Two were excluded due to lack of baseline equivalence (Troia & Whitney, 2003; Hook, Macaruso, & Jones, 2001), four were excluded as they did not use the commercially available Fast ForWord program (Bishop, Adams, & Rosen, 2006; Bishop, Adams, Lehtonen, & Rosen, 2005; Wren & Roulstone, 2008; Ukrainetz, Ross, & Harm, 2009) and one was excluded because it was a corrigendum to a study included within the review (Given, Wasserman, Chari, Beattie, & Eden, 2009). The corrigendum was noted in the original paper (Given, Wasserman, Chari, Beattie, & Eden, 2008).…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The free configuration settings were used rather than the teacher settings, allowing the SLP to select the most appropriate targets and stimuli for each child from session to session. Wren and Roulstone (2008) discovered that although there was not a statistically significant difference between the groups, the preschool children who received the PFSS intervention showed a trend towards more improvement compared to the children in the control group. This occurred when the children were stimulable for the target sounds prior to intervention and showed developmental rather than non-developmental error patterns.…”
Section: Intervention For Children With Speech Sound Disordersmentioning
confidence: 87%
“…Each session contains between three and five games that have been configured to target the pattern, with each game being played multiple times across the sessions but with increasing complexity in their configuration. Wren and Roulstone (2008) compared the effect of 12 hours of an experimental version of PFSS with conventional table-top intervention (targeting input processing and phonological awareness) and no intervention (n = 33, with 11 randomly assigned to each of three groups: computer-based PFSS, conventional table-top intervention, and no intervention). Participants received three sessions a week over 8 weeks, each session lasting 30 minutes.…”
Section: Intervention For Children With Speech Sound Disordersmentioning
confidence: 99%
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