Bibliographic Details
| Title: |
Children Draw Talking Around the World. |
| Authors: |
McLeod, Sharynne1 smcleod@csu.edu.au, Gregoric, Carolyn1, Davies, Jessamy1, Dealtry, Lysa1, Delli-Pizzi, Laura1, Downey, Belinda1, Elwick, Sheena1, Hopf, Suzanne C.1, Ivory, Nicola1, McAlister, Holly1, Murray, Elizabeth1, Rahman, Azizur1, Sikder, Shukla1, Tran, Van H.1, Zischke, Cherie1 |
| Source: |
Language, Speech & Hearing Services in Schools. Oct2025, Vol. 56 Issue 4, p1088-1109. 22p. |
| Subject Terms: |
*TREATMENT of communicative disorders, *PEARSON correlation (Statistics), *HEALTH services accessibility, *QUALITATIVE research, *DRAWING, *DESCRIPTIVE statistics, *QUANTITATIVE research, *LISTENING, *ATTITUDE (Psychology), *MULTILINGUALISM, *NONVERBAL communication, *EARLY intervention (Education), *THEMATIC analysis, *COMMUNICATION, *CHILD development, *SPEECH evaluation, *CONCEPTUAL structures, *ART therapy, *SOCIAL support, *DATA analysis software, *CONFIDENCE intervals, *CHILD psychology, *INTERPERSONAL relations, *HEALTH care teams, *PATIENTS' attitudes, *LANGUAGE acquisition, *CULTURAL pluralism, *CHILD behavior, *SELF-perception, *CHILDREN |
| Abstract: |
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to determine how children from across the world draw themselves talking and to apply an interdisciplinary analysis to understand children's perspectives to improve delivery of services. Method: Participants were 200 children from 24 countries who submitted a drawing of themselves talking to someone using the Early Childhood Voices Drawing Protocol. Drawings were uploaded to Charles Sturt University's Children Draw Talking Global Online Gallery. The participants were 2-12 years old (M = 6.13) and spoke 23 languages, and 28.5% of caregivers reported concerns about their children's talking. A 16-member interdisciplinary research team analyzed the drawings using descriptive, developmental, focal point, meaning-making, and systemic functional linguistics transitivity analysis frameworks. Results: Children could draw themselves talking. The participants' age and ability to draw a human figure were strongly correlated. Most participants reported they felt happy about talking and drew themselves talking to one or more conversational partners, with focal points that included body parts and facial expressions, talking and listening, proximity to others, relationships and connections, and positivity and vibrancy. The cultural-historical meaning-making analysis identified 10 themes: relationships, places, actions, natural elements, human-made elements, cultural experiences, logical thinking, emotion, imagination, and concepts. The systemic functional linguistics transitivity analysis identified 71 processes, 134 participants, and 48 circumstances indicating richness in the children's depictions of talking. Conclusions: Children across the world can use drawing to communicate who they talk to (e.g., friends, family, animals, professionals), when and where they talk (e.g., outside, at home), what they talk about (e.g., toys, animals, friends, family), and how they feel about talking (e.g., happy). These insights promote understanding of children's communication and inform how children's insights can be included in assessment and intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
| Database: |
Academic Search Index |