Clasroom Intervention In Inhibitory Control In Children With And Without Language Disorders

REVISTA DE INVESTIGACION EN LOGOPEDIA(2021)

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Abstract
The aim of this work was to assess the effect of classroom intervention in the inhibitory control carried out in different classrooms of primary scholars (9-11 years) that had students with Development Language Disorder (n = 5) or dyslexia (n = 4) and their classmates without difficulties (n = 6). The design followed a pre-post intervention model over verbal fluency, phonological memory and inhibitory control. The intervention consisted of eight 10-minute sessions for the entire class group, two per week during four weeks, plus a 1-hour long session with small groups in the middle of the sessions, with activities based on different inhibitory control tasks ("Stroop", "Go-no go", "Plots", "Simon",... ). Children with DLD and dyslexia showed a lower phonological memory score before the intervention. The intervention only had a slight effect on phonological memory in all the groups. However, the post-intervention comparison between groups showed lower scores of verbal fluency and inhibitory control in the DLD group compared to the other two, which may indicate a possible improvement in these variables in dyslexia and typical development children groups. In conclusion, the intervention had a scarce effect, especially in the DLD group. Further, works including a larger number of participants and intervention sessions might help elucidate reasons why the present work does not show specific improvements in inhibitory control and fluency after the intervention.
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Key words
Inhibition, Executive functions, Specific Language Impairment, Reading difficulties, Phonological memory, Verbal Fluency
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