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Category: 6. Language
JACK001. Jackson, Stacie Jane.
A comparative profile of vernacular phonology: Lumbee Vernacular
English and African-American Vernacular English in Robeson County.
Thesis. North Carolina Central University, 1997.
76 pages; 33 notes
Publication type: Thesis (masters)
Describes the phonological features (i.e., the
patterning of speech sounds) of both Lumbee and African American speakers
in Robeson County. Jackson devises her own phonological inventories for
both sets of speakers to aid speech-language pathologists in Robeson County.
These inventories are presented as Chapter 4 of the thesis. She divides
the phonological structures into three primary categories: (1) syllable
structure processes, (2) substitution and assimilation processes, and (3)
prosodic features (p. 42). For each phonological feature, she gives a definition
and at least one phrase or sentence as an example, along with the age and
gender of the speaker who used it.
Jackson developed her phonological inventory by listening
to audio tapes of Lumbee and African-American speakers which were collected
by the North Carolina Language and Life Project at North Carolina State
University. Then, with parental consent, she administered the GFTA (Goldman
Fristoe Test of Articulation) Sounds-in-Words subtest to sixteen Lumbee
and sixteen African-American third and fourth grade children. The children's
responses were audio taped and transcribed. The GFTA results projected
two scores, one of which reflected comparison with Jackson's specially
developed phonology inventory.
Jackson discusses the differences she found in scores
when adjusted for the dialect differences her inventory detected. For
Lumbee speakers, her comparison yielded a statistically significant
difference. She concludes: The phonological inventory can be applied
to any standardized articulation measurement to equip speech-language
pathologists with dialectal features characteristic of Lumbee and African-American
vernacular speakers in Robeson County. The phonological inventory will
provide speech-language pathologists in Robeson County with a better
understanding of linguistic diversity in the clients they are to assess
and treat....It is evident from this study that the use of a single
method or instrument for obtaining a speech profile is definitely inadequate
and may result in misdiagnosis (p. 65).
Additional subjects: Speech-language pathologists | Phonological
inventories | Goldman Fristoe Test of Articulation
This annotation was edited on: June 5, 2002
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