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A survey of communicative disorders students' attitudes toward stuttering
Authors:Kenneth O. St. Louis  Norman J. Lass
Affiliation:Department of Speech Pathology and Audiology, West Virginia University, Morgantown, USA
Abstract:Cooper's (1975) Clinician Attitudes Toward Stuttering (CATS) inventories were conpleted by 1,902 speech-language pathology and audiology students from 33 universities, each in a different state. The majority of respondents perceived stutterers as having psychosocial problems and believed that client and parental counseling were essential aspects of treatment. These views were relatively unaffected by student training and clinical exposure. In addition, most of the assumptions of Johnson's diagnosogenic theory of stuttering were held by the majority of the students surveyed. Most of the respondents believed that stuttering was difficult to modify and that speech clinicians were neither adept nor comfortable treating stutterers. These latter attitudes were significantly affected by training, i.e., the more advanced the students' training, the more pessimistic their views on clinician competence. Other professional attitudes and the effect of training on them are also discussed.
Keywords:Address correspondence to Kenneth O. St. Louis   Speech Pathology and Audiology   805 Allen Hall   West Virginia University   Morgantown   WV 26506   USA.
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