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Skip to Search Results- 4Stuttering
- 2Children
- 2Video-recordings
- 1Autoethnographic design
- 1Empathy
- 1Individuals who stutter (IWS)
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2015-06-16
Diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) proves to have great potential for investigating the white matter network of the brain. The ability to study these pathways may offer important insight into the neurological differences of people with communication disorders. However, due to the high level of...
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2015-06-07
Erven, Leslie, Langevin, Marilyn, Savill, Shay-Lee, Danielsen, Sarah
Background/Purpose: Teachers’ understanding of stuttering can powerfully influence the educational experience of children who stutter. The purpose of this mixed methods study was to investigate changes in student teachers’ understanding of the impact of stuttering on the lives of PWS before and...
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2011-05-03
Elsinga, Laura, O'Dell, Christina, Kulchytska, Dariya, Evans, Kayla
Background/Purpose The negative stereotype associated with stuttering has been shown to be both persistent and robust. The stereotype persists not only in the general public, but also in the student clinician population and practicing speech-language pathologists (SLPs). It is recognized that...
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Exploring the Viability of Exposure to Stories of Individuals who Stutter as a Learning Tool
Exploring the Viability of Exposure to Stories of Individuals who Stutter as a Learning Tool
Download2011-01-13
Dole, Kate, Wrightly, Mallorie, Mosaico, Sarah, Kelly, Jennifer-Laura, Langevin, Marilyn, Kully, Deborah, Reid, Rachel, Connatty, Shelley
The present study was concerned with determining the viability of using exposure to video-recordings of individuals who stutter (IWS) to develop in student speech-language pathologists (student SLPs) an empathic understanding of IWS.