2003
DOI: 10.1080/0269920031000111348
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Phonological development: a normative study of British English‐speaking children

Abstract: This paper reports a normative study on the phonological development of British English-speaking children. Speech samples of 684 children, aged between 3;0 and 6;11 years, randomly selected from nurseries and schools in eight different areas throughout the UK, were collected and analysed to obtain normative data. This paper reports on two aspects of speech development: the age of acquisition of sounds (phonetic acquisition) and the age that error patterns were suppressed (phonemic acquisition). It discusses th… Show more

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Cited by 312 publications
(385 citation statements)
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“…Regarding the age of the participants, most of the sample consisted of children aged 5 years; they presented poorer results when compared to participants aged 4 years. This finding does not corroborate studies that show that the higher the age the better is the phonological suitability [17][18][19] . This research corroborates a national study that showed that children aged five years presented higher prevalence of phonological deviations when compared to the four years old group 20 .…”
Section: Resultscontrasting
confidence: 55%
“…Regarding the age of the participants, most of the sample consisted of children aged 5 years; they presented poorer results when compared to participants aged 4 years. This finding does not corroborate studies that show that the higher the age the better is the phonological suitability [17][18][19] . This research corroborates a national study that showed that children aged five years presented higher prevalence of phonological deviations when compared to the four years old group 20 .…”
Section: Resultscontrasting
confidence: 55%
“…The scale contains only one set of levels; no age bands have been created. However, it is acknowledged that at four years children's phonological system, and potentially their intelligibility, will still be developing (Dodd, Holm, Hua, & Crosbie, 2003) and in the introduction to the scale examples of developmental speech substitutions are given. The scale may be easier to apply with older children, whose speech has matured.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Whilst a definitive cut off age for the definition of PSD has not been agreed, it has generally been applied to children of approximately age 8 and above. This is logical given that speech acquisition is generally considered to be complete by this age (Dodd, Holm, Hua & Crosbie, 2003;James, 2001;Smit, 1993aSmit, , 1993b. Moreover, Shriberg, Fourakis, Hall, Karlsson, Lohmeier, McSweeny et al (2010) justify a cut off between age 8 and 9 on the basis that children whose speech disorder continues beyond this age are small in number but more at risk for long term persistence and associated sequelae, sometimes into adulthood.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%