
Developing Narrative Comprehension
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Content
- Intro
- Developing Narrative Comprehension
- Editorial page
- Title page
- Copyright page
- Table of contents
- Acknowledging our reviewers
- Cross-linguistic development of narrative comprehension from A to Z
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Narrative comprehension and how it can be understood
- 2.1 Theoretical background
- 2.2 Comprehension of stories in different modalities
- 3. Our model of inference-based visual narrative comprehension
- 4. The MAIN materials
- 4.1 Background: The 'birth' of MAIN
- 4.2 The picture stories
- 4.3 The MAIN comprehension task
- 4.4 Assessing narrative comprehension with MAIN
- 5. The contributions of the book
- 6. Narrative comprehension outcomes
- 6.1 Steep increase with age initially
- 6.2 Reaching a milestone by age 5
- 6.3 Variation at earlier ages
- 6.4 Similarity in narrative comprehension in bilinguals' two languages
- 6.5 Factors affecting narrative comprehension
- 6.6 Putting our tool to the test
- 7. Conclusion
- Funding
- References
- Narrative comprehension in Lebanese Arabic-French bilingual children
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 Lebanon's multilingual context and the challenges for language assessment
- 1.2 Development of narrative comprehension
- 1.3 Factors involved in the development of narrative comprehension
- 2. Objectives
- 3. Method
- 3.1 Participants
- 3.2 Materials
- 3.3 Procedures
- 3.4 Narrative measures
- 4. Results
- 4.1 Development of narrative comprehension in Lebanese Arabic and French
- 4.2 Comparison of narrative comprehension in Lebanese Arabic and French
- 4.3 Development of comprehension skills in relation with the development of story structure and story complexity
- 4.4 Development of comprehension skills in relation with language dominance and with exposure to stories
- 5. Discussion
- 5.1 Development of narrative comprehension in Lebanese Arabic and French
- 5.2 Comparison of comprehension skills of children in both languages
- 5.3 Development of narrative comprehension in relation with production
- 5.4 Development of comprehension skills in relation with language dominance, expressive vocabulary, and exposure to stories
- 6. Conclusion and clinical implications
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix A. Items included in the Exposure to Narratives Index (ENI)
- Appendix B.
- Inferential comprehension, age and language: How Swedish-German bilingual preschoolers understand picture-based stories
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Background
- 2.1 General findings
- 2.2 Comprehension in MAIN
- 3. Aim and research questions
- 4. Methods
- 4.1 Participants
- 4.2 Materials
- 4.3 Procedure
- 4.4 Scoring and categorization of the comprehension questions
- 5. Results
- 5.1 Comprehension scores: Differences between age groups, tasks and languages
- 5.2 Comprehension scores: Effect of expressive vocabulary knowledge
- 5.3 The performance of individual children
- 5.4 Different comprehension questions
- 6. Discussion and conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Funding
- References
- Bilingual Turkish-Swedish children's understanding of MAIN picture sequences: Individual variation, age, language and task effects
- 1. Introduction and background
- 2. Aim and research questions
- 3. Method
- 3.1 Participants
- 3.2 Materials
- 3.3 Procedure
- 3.4 Scoring
- 4. Results
- 4.1 MAIN comprehension scores: Differences between languages, tasks and age groups
- 4.2 MAIN comprehension scores: Individual variation
- 4.3 Influence of vocabulary knowledge on MAIN comprehension scores
- 4.4 Performance on individual comprehension questions
- 5. Discussion and conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- Funding
- References
- Narrative comprehension in simultaneously bilingual Finnish-Swedish and monolingual Finnish children
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Method
- 2.1 Participants
- 2.2 Procedure and design
- 2.3 Statistical analysis
- 3. Results
- 3.1 Narrative comprehension: Total score on comprehension questions
- 3.2 Associations between narrative comprehension and production
- 3.3 Children's performance on the different comprehension questions
- 4. Discussion
- 4.1 Language comparison
- 4.2 Group comparison
- 4.3 Associations between narrative comprehension and production
- 4.4 Task comparison
- 4.5 Comprehension of different macrostructural components
- 5. Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- Funding
- References
- Narrative comprehension by Croatian-Italian bilingual children 5-7 years old: The role of receptive vocabulary and sentence comprehension
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 Assessing narrative skills
- 1.2 Narrative comprehension in monolingual children
- 1.3 Narrative comprehension in bilingual children
- 1.4 The current study
- 2. Method
- 2.1 Participants
- 2.2 Materials
- 2.3 Statistical analyses
- 3. Results
- 3.1 Descriptive statistics
- 3.2 Relationships between participant characteristics and language skills
- 3.3 The role of receptive vocabulary and sentence comprehension in narrative comprehension
- 4. Discussion
- 4.1 Narrative comprehension in L1 and L2
- 4.2 Associations between language skills and languages
- 5. Conclusion
- Funding
- References
- Bilingual children's lexical and narrative comprehension in Dutch as the majority language
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 The role of the input
- 1.2 Comparisons of bilingual and monolingual children: Lexicon
- 1.3 Comparisons of bilingual and monolingual children: Narration
- 1.4 The current research
- 2. Method
- 2.1 Participants
- 2.2 Measures and materials
- 2.3 Procedures
- 2.4 Data-analysis
- 3. Results
- 3.1 Research question 1: Comparing bilingual and monolingual children
- 3.2 Research question 2: Comparing bilingual Tarifit-Dutch and Turkish-Dutch children
- 3.3 Research question 3: The role of input in the bilingual samples
- 4. Discussion and conclusion
- 4.1 Lexical and narrative comprehension: Bilinguals versus monolinguals
- 4.2 Lexical and narrative comprehension: Variation within a bilingual sample
- 4.3 Clinical and educational implications
- 4.4 Limitations of the study and future research
- 4.5 Conclusions
- Funding
- References
- Appendix 1. Listening comprehension, sum of points per question (number of children who received this question)
- Appendix 1. Listening comprehension, sum of points per question (number of children who received this question)
- Appendix 2. Generated story comprehension (sum of points per question), sum of points per question (number of children who received this question)
- Why do you think the boy would be unhappy if he saw what the cat was eating?: Comprehension of German narratives in Russian- and Turkish-German bilingual children
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Aims and research questions
- 3. Method
- 3.1 Participants
- 3.2 Materials
- 3.3 Procedure
- 3.4 Statistical analysis
- 4. Results
- 4.1 Total scores for comprehension questions
- 4.2 Comprehension questions with regard to the age group and elicitation mode
- 4.3 An in-depth analysis of goals and internal states
- 4.4 A quantitative note on examples from our dataset
- 5. Discussion and conclusion
- References
- Narrative comprehension and its associations with gender and nonverbal cognitive skills in monolingual and bilingual German preschoolers
- 1. Narrative skills
- 1.1 Narrative comprehension
- 1.2 Research on nonverbal cognitive skills and narrative comprehension
- 1.3 Research on gender and narrative comprehension
- 2. The present study
- 3. Methods
- 3.1 Participants
- 3.2 Main
- 3.3 Cpm
- 4. Results
- 4.1 Narrative comprehension
- 4.2 Impact of nonverbal cognitive skills on narrative comprehension
- 4.3 Impact of gender on narrative comprehension
- 5. Discussion and conclusion
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Bilingualism effects in the narrative comprehension of children with Developmental Language Disorder and L2-Greek: Links with language, executive function and Theory of Mind
- 1. Introduction
- 1.1 Narrative comprehension and language ability
- 1.2 Narrative comprehension and executive functions
- 1.3 Narrative comprehension and Theory of Mind
- 2. Aims and research questions
- 3. Method
- 3.1 Participants
- 3.2 General procedure
- 3.3 Materials and procedure
- 3.4 Analysis plan
- 4. Results
- 4.1 Narrative task
- 4.2 Language Ability tests
- 4.3 Executive function: 2-back task
- 4.4 Online video verification first-order false belief task
- 4.5 Narrative comprehension, age, language dominance and independent language ability, executive function and ToM assessments
- 5. Discussion
- 6. Conclusions
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Appendix
- &Cat story&
- &Dog story&
- Commentary: Time travel in the development of cross-linguistic narrative evaluation
- Important
- Amazing
- References
- Index
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