Title: ASHAs Position on Language Diversity
1ASHAs Position on Language Diversity
2ASHAs Position on Language Diversity
- The type of English spoken in the US is commonly
referred to as American English (AE). - In the US, speakers of English may be categorized
into one of three basic groups on the basis of
accent or dialect.
3ASHAs Position on Language Diversity
- The first group consists of person who were born
in another country and learned their first
language(s) before they acquired English. - Their English may be accented by their first
language(s). - This group could include persons born in other
countries where students learn English while in
school.
4ASHAs Position on Language Diversity
- The second group consists of person born in the
United States who learned their first language(s)
before they acquired English. - This group could include children born to parents
who speak a language(s) other than English in the
home and whose children then learn English in
school, or children who are learning multiple
languages, including English, simultaneously.
5ASHAs Position on Language Diversity
- The third group consists of persons born in the
United States or other countries whose only
language is English. - Their development of English is affected by
region, status, style, ethnicity, age, gender,
life experiences, and communication models,
resulting in their use of a dialect of English,
which may or may not be viewed as a nonstandard
dialect of English.
6ASHAs Position on Language Diversity
- Examples of this third group would include, but
are not limited to, individuals who speak
Appalachian English, one of the New York
dialects, African American English, standard
English, British dialect, southern English, and
English influenced by some other non-English
languages such as Spanish. - In reality, all speakers have accents and
dialects because to speak a language is to speak
some dialect of that language.
7ASHAs Position on Language Diversity
- Although the term dialect is intended to be a
neutral label to refer to any variety of language
which is shared by a group of speakers (Wolfram,
1991), the existence of the various dialects is
the result of historical, social, linguistic, and
geographical factors, which may bear on their
perception as socially prestigious (standard) or
not.
8ASHAs Position on Language Diversity
- Because language issues have impacted the country
in much the way that civil rights issues affected
policy after the 1960s, the American
Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA, 1983),
unanimously approved the position paper on social
dialects prepared by the Committee on the Status
of Racial Minorities after a decade of study.
9ASHAs Position on Language Diversity
- It is the position of ASHA that no dialectal
variety of English is a disorder or a
pathological form of speech or language. - Each social dialect is adequate as a functional
and effective variety of English. - Each represents a legitimate rule-governed
language system comprised of phonological,
morphological, syntactic, semantic, lexical,
pragmatic, and suprasegmental features.
10ASHAs Position on Language Diversity
- Each serves a communication function as well as a
social solidarity function. - Each dialect maintains the communication network
and the social construct of the community of
speakers who use it. - Furthermore, each is a symbolic representation of
the geographic, historical, social, and cultural
background of its speakers.
11ASHAs Position on Language Diversity
- However, society has adopted the linguistic
idealization model that standard English is the
linguistic archetype. - Standard English is the linguistic variety used
by government, the mass media, business,
education, science, and the arts. - Therefore, there may be nonstandard English
speakers who find it advantageous to have access
to the use of standard English.
12Difference versus Disorder
- A speaker of any language or dialect may exhibit
a language disorder unrelated to his or her use
of the native dialect. - One must distinguish between those aspects of
linguistic variation that represent regular
patterns in the speaker's dialect from those that
represent true disorders in speech, language, and
hearing.
13Difference versus Disorder
- It is indeed possible for dialect speakers to
have linguistic disorders within the dialect. - The SLP must have certain competencies to
distinguish between dialectal differences and
communicative disorders. - These competencies include
- recognizing all American English dialects as
rule-governed linguistic systems
14Difference versus Disorder
- understanding the rules and linguistic features
of American English dialect(s) represented by
their clientele and - being familiar with nondiscriminatory testing and
dynamic assessment procedures. - Once the difference/disorder distinction has been
made, the SLP treats only those features or
characteristics that are true errors and not
attributable to the dialect.
15Elective Clinical Services
- Aside from traditionally clinical service
delivery, the SLP may also be available to
provide elective clinical services to nonstandard
English speakers who do not present a disorder. - For these individuals, the SLP provides the
desired competency in standard English without
jeopardizing the integrity of the individuals
first dialect.
16Elective Clinical Services
- The approach of the elective service must be
functional and must emphasize the appropriateness
of the first and second dialects for different
contexts. - ASHAs position statement has similar
implications for bilingual individuals. - The SLP may provide elective clinical services to
the bilingual individual seeking to acquire a
more standard production of English.
17Qualifications for Clinical Service Delivery
- It is a prerequisite for the SLP to have a
thorough understanding and appreciation for the
community and culture of the nonstandard English
speaker. - The SLP must have a thorough knowledge of the
linguistic rules of the particular dialect or
languages of the bilingual speaker.
18Qualifications for Clinical Service Delivery
- For the bilingual speaker who exhibits a speech
or language disorder within his or her dominant
language, speech or language intervention would
be indicated. - However, treatment should only be initiated after
a comprehensive evaluation of the dominant
language by an appropriately trained SLP has been
undertaken.
19CLD Professionals in the Discipline
- Demographic changes anticipated over the next
decade indicate a need for increasing numbers of
professionals with the linguistic diversity to
provide services to those individuals with
communication disorders from CLD populations. - Speakers with accents and dialects must also be
permitted full participation in the professions
of speech-language pathology and audiology.
20CLD Professionals in the Discipline
- In the past, many communication sciences and
disorders education programs and some employers
have imposed a monocultural perspective regarding
linguistic diversity. - Many educational programs have discouraged
speakers of certain nonstandard linguistic
varieties from majoring in communication sciences
and disorders.
21CLD Professionals in the Discipline
- Other programs have not permitted or have
restricted clinical practicum experiences for
students who speak certain nonstandard
linguistic varieties of English. - Still others have required student enrollment as
a client at the university clinic to eradicate
accents or dialects, or have reassigned such
students based solely on negative attitudes and
prejudices of clients and clinical supervisors.
22CLD Professionals in the Discipline
- In many of these cases, the ability of students
with accents and dialects to provide clinical
services or write clinical reports have been
called into question. - Similar negative practices have been demonstrated
by some employers. - These behaviors are contrary to fostering and
celebrating the cultural diversity that enhances
the profession.
23CLD Professionals in the Discipline
- The same position that states that dialects among
our clients are not to be considered as
disordered speech and language governs the same
inclusiveness and acceptance of diversity among
practitioners and students from CLD populations
who may not speak standard English.
24CLD Professionals in the Discipline
- SLPs and audiologists, as well as the consumers
they serve, all speak with accents and/or
dialects that reflect when, where, how, and with
whom and from whom they learned language.
25Language Diversity and Discrimination
- The presence of an accent and/or dialect may make
a person vulnerable to stereotypical judgments,
prejudices, and sometimes discrimination because
some accents or dialects are deemed more
acceptable than others. - Nonetheless, members of ASHA, in the conduct of
their professional activities, are urged not to
discriminate against persons who speak with an
accent or dialect.