Honors Program Theses
Award/Availability
Open Access Honors Program Thesis
First Advisor
Kenneth Bleile
Abstract
Standardized language assessments of children are commonly used to diagnose language disorders, yet these tools are often normed on a narrow demographic of monolingual, middleclass, white children. This narrow normative data has led to misdiagnosis of children who fall outside of the norm created. Studies highlight how cultural, linguistic, and normative test biases disproportionately affect children who speak non-mainstream dialects, are multilingual, have disabilities, or are from lower socioeconomic backgrounds. The findings of this literature review calls attention to a disconnect between research, policy, and clinical practice, indicating that SLPs rely on standardized assessment tools out of accessibility or in compliance with guidelines, despite their known limitations. This literature review advocates for an integration of informal assessment tools and further research and production of culturally responsive, inclusive assessments to ensure equitable access diagnosis and intervention for all children.
Year of Submission
2025
Department
Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders
University Honors Designation
A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the designation University Honors
Date Original
2025
Object Description
1 PDF file (28 pages)
Copyright
©2025 Sierra Kay Buscher
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Language
en
File Format
application/pdf
Recommended Citation
Buscher, Sierra Kay, "Language Assessment in Pediatric Speech-Language Pathology" (2025). Honors Program Theses. 992.
https://scholarworks.uni.edu/hpt/992