dc.description.abstract |
Diagnostic testing of speech/language skills in the African languages spoken in South Africa
is a challenging task, as standardised language tests in the official languages of South Africa
barely exist. Commercially available language tests are in English, and have been standardised
in other parts of the world. Such tests are often translated into African languages, a practice
that speech language therapists deem linguistically and culturally inappropriate. In response
to the need for developing clinical language assessment instruments that could be used in
South Africa, this article reports on data collected with a Northern Sotho non-word repetition
task (NRT). Non-word repetition measures various aspects of phonological processing,
including phonological working memory (PWM), and is used widely by speech language
therapists, linguists, and educational psychologists in the Western world. The design of a
novel Northern Sotho NRT is described, and it is argued that the task could be used successfully
in the South African context to discriminate between children with weak and strong Northern
Sotho phonological processing ability, regardless of the language of learning and teaching. The
NRT was piloted with 120 third graders, and showed moderate to strong correlations with
other measures of PWM, such as digit span and English non-word repetition. Furthermore, the
task was positively associated with both word and fluent reading in Northern Sotho, and it
reliably predicted reading outcomes in the tested population. Suggestions are made for
improving the current version of the Northern Sotho NRT, whereafter it should be suitable to
test learners from various age groups. |
en |