“…Narratives consist of story structure (or the story level grammar; Stein & Glenn, 1979) and the sentence level structures that reflect literate language through the inclusion of modifiers, causal and temporal markers, and subordinate and relative clauses (Greenhalgh & Strong, 2001;Westby, 2005). Interventions that promote narrative language (i.e., narrative language intervention; see T. D. Spencer & Petersen, 2020) may have a lasting impact on academic achievement considering early narrative language predicts later academic achievement (Faizo et al, 1996), specifically related to reading comprehension (Catts et al, 2002;Dickinson & McCabe, 2001). In primary grades, children are expected to demonstrate an understanding of narrative discourse-level tasks that are often extremely challenging for children with hearing loss, especially when the child was not provided immediate auditory access or appropriate early intervention (Moeller et al, 2010;Nittrouer & Lowenstein, 2015).…”