Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
911358 Journal of Fluency Disorders 2014 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

•College major, training, and cultural factors affecting attitudes toward stuttering of college students were investigated in the USA and Poland.•Students in speech-language pathology (SLP) held better attitudes than non-SLP students in both countries, illustrating a “halo effect”.•Stuttering attitudes of USA graduate students were better than undergraduate students, more so for SLP than for non-SLP students.•Native American students’ stuttering attitudes were similar to American non-SLP students’ attitudes but better than Polish non-SLP students’ attitudes.•Overall, American students’ attitudes were more positive the Polish students’ attitudes toward stuttering.

PurposeThe study sought to identify major-specific, training, and cultural factors affecting attitudes toward stuttering of speech-language pathology (SLP) students.MethodEight convenience samples of 50 students each from universities in the USA and Poland filled out the Public Opinion Survey of Human Attributes-Stuttering (POSHA–S) in English or Polish, respectively. USA samples included undergraduate and graduate students in SLP majors or non-SLP majors as well as a sample of non-SLP students who were Native Americans. Polish samples included SLP (logopedics), psychology, and mixed majors.ResultsSLP students held more positive attitudes than non-SLP students in both countries. Graduate students held more positive attitudes than undergraduate students in the USA, and this effect was stronger for SLP than for non-SLP students. Native American students’ stuttering attitudes were similar to other American non-SLP students’ attitudes. Polish student attitudes were less positive overall than those of their American student counterparts.ConclusionSLP students’ attitudes toward stuttering are affected by a “halo effect” of being in that major, by specific training in fluency disorders, and by various cultural factors, yet to be clearly understood.Educational objectives: The reader will be able to: (a) describe major factors affecting SLP students’ attitudes toward stuttering; (b) describe similarities and differences in attitudes toward stuttering of students from the USA and Poland; (c) describe similarities and differences in attitudes toward stuttering of Native American students from the USA and non-Native American students.

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