Page 13 - Difference or Disorder Digital Version
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INTRODUCTION


                          The increasing diversity in the United States has given a new role to educators and

                   speech‐language pathologists.  Over the past decade, general education teachers have been


                   asked to collect data and track progress on speech and language development for students

                   about whom they have concerns, in order to determine whether or not to refer students for


                   evaluation.  Many teachers have expressed uncertainty about how to differentiate speech

                   and language errors that result from native language influences and those that are indicative

                   of speech‐language impairment.  This same challenge falls on speech‐language pathologists,


                   who make diagnostic decisions about students.  Many native language influences mimic signs

                   of  speech‐language  impairment,  making  it  impossible  to  use  the  same  rules  for  bilingual

                   students  that  we  use  for  monolingual  students.    Additionally,  the  patterns  of  language


                   influence change depending on the native language of the student, further complicating the

                   decision‐making process.

                          Difference or Disorder? provides educators with information about many different


                   languages.  Having identified the most common home languages in the United States (U.S.

                   Census Bureau, 2009), the Bilinguistics team has explored the many linguistic differences of

                   these languages in relation to English. Languages covered by this text include Arabic, Czech,


                   Farsi,  French,  German,  Hebrew,  Japanese,  Korean,  Mandarin,  Russian,  Spanish,  and

                   Vietnamese.  There  is  also  a  section  on  African‐American  English,  which  is  a  dialect  of

                   American English.










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