Common Phrases Test
By: DeVault Otologic Research Lab
Description
The Common Phrases Test (Robbins et al, 1998) was developed to assess understanding of familiar phrases spoken in everyday situations. The phrases are declarative statements or questions that contain simple syntactic structures and vocabulary familiar to young profoundly hearing impaired children (i.e., I like ice cream). This is an open-set test and can be administered via audition alone, vision only, or audition plus vision. The child is encouraged to guess and is scored according to number of words correct. There are six lists (A–F) that contain 10 short phrases each.
Scoring
Performance is scored by the percentage of sentences (N=10) and key words (N=20) correctly understood. Because the phrases are similar, the child must repeat the entire sentence to receive credit for the complete sentence. Key words are underlined.
Reference
Robbins AM, Renshaw JJ, Osberger MJ. Common Phrases Test. Indianapolis, Ind: University School of Medicine; 1988.
How to Order:
Indiana University School of Medicine
Department of Otolaryngology
Attention: Lynette
Riley Research Wing, Room 044
702 Barnhill Drive
Indianapolis, IN 46202-5200
(317) 274-4915 Phone
(317) 274-4949 Fax
Have more questions?
Connect to a MentorTalk to a recipient
Visit Hearing JourneyJoin the online community
Contact the Bionic Ear AssociationReach our support network