Problem

Children’s use of pronouns. Clinical observations suggest that specifically language-impai...

Children’s use of pronouns. Clinical observations suggest that specifically language-impaired (SLI) children have great difficulty with the proper use of pronouns. This phenomenon was investigated and reported in the Journal of Communication Disorders (Mar. 1995). Thirty children, all from low-income families, participated in the study. Ten were five-year-old SLI children, 10 were younger (three-year-old) normally developing (YND) children, and 10 were older (five-year-old) normally developing (OND) children. The table contains the gender, deviation intelligence quotient (DIQ), and percentage of pronoun errors observed for each of the 30 subjects.

a. Identify the variables in the data set as quantitative or qualitative.


b. Why is it nonsensical to compute numerical descriptive measures for qualitative variables?


c. Compute measures of central tendency for DIQ for the 10 SLI children.


d. Compute measures of central tendency for DIQ for the 10 YND children.


e. Compute measures of central tendency for DIQ for the 10 OND children.


f. Use the results from parts c-e to compare the DIQ central tendencies of the three groups of children. Is it reasonable to use a single number (e.g., mean or median) to describe the center of the DIQ distribution? Or should three “centers” be calculated, one for each of the three groups of children? Explain.


g. Repeat parts cf for the percentage of pronoun errors.

SLI

Subject

Gender

Group

DIQ

Pronoun Errors (%)

1

F

YND

110

94.40

2

F

YND

92

19.05

3

F

YND

92

62.50

4

M

YND

100

18.75

5

F

YND

86

0

6

F

YND

105

55.00

7

F

YND

90

100.00

8

M

YND

96

86.67

9

M

YND

90

32.43

10

F

YND

92

0

11

F

SLI

86

60.00

12

M

SLI

86

40.00

13

M

SLI

94

31.58

14

M

SLI

98

66.67

15

F

SLI

89

42.86

16

F

SLI

84

27.27

17

M

SLI

110

33.33

18

F

SLI

107

0

19

F

SLI

87

0

20

M

SLI

95

0

21

M

OND

110

0

22

M

OND

113

0

23

M

OND

113

0

24

F

OND

109

0

25

M

OND

92

0

26

F

OND

108

0

27

M

OND

95

0

28

F

OND

87

0

29

F

OND

94

0

30

F

OND

98

0

Source: Moore, M. E. “Error analysis of pronouns by normal and language-impaired children.”, Journal of Communication Disorders, Vol. 28. No. 1, Mar. 1995, p. 62 (Table 2), p. 67 (Table 5).

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