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Dive into the research topics where Catherine M. Bohn-Gettler is active.

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Featured researches published by Catherine M. Bohn-Gettler.


Memory & Cognition | 2011

Adults’ and children’s monitoring of story events in the service of comprehension

Catherine M. Bohn-Gettler; David N. Rapp; Paul van den Broek; Panayiota Kendeou; Mary Jane White

When reading narratives, adults monitor shifts in time, space, characters, goals, and causation. Shifts in any of these dimensions affect both moment-by-moment reading and memory organization. The extant developmental literature suggests that middle school children have relatively sophisticated understandings of each of these dimensions but does not indicate whether they spontaneously monitor these dimensions during reading experiences. In four experiments, we examined the processing of event shifts by adults and children, using both an explicit verb-clustering task and a reading time task. The results indicate that middle school children’s and adults’ post-reading memory is organized using these dimensions but that children do not monitor dimensions during moment-by-moment reading in the same manner as adults. These differences were not a function of differentially difficult texts for children and adults, or between-group differences. The findings have implications for models of adult and child text processing and for understanding children’s developing narrative comprehension.


Aggressive Behavior | 2011

Behavioral and Social Cognitive Processes in Preschool Children's Social Dominance

Anthony D. Pellegrini; Mark J. Van Ryzin; Cary J. Roseth; Catherine M. Bohn-Gettler; Danielle N. Dupuis; Meghan Hickey; Annie Peshkam

This longitudinal, naturalistic study addressed behavioral and social cognitive processes implicated in preschool childrens social dominance. In the first objective, we examined the degree to which peer aggression, affiliation, and postaggression reconciliation predicted social dominance across a school year. Consistent with predictions, all three predicted dominance early in the year while only affiliation predicted dominance later in the year, suggesting that aggression, affiliation, and reconciliation were used to establish social dominance where affiliation was used to maintain it. In the second, exploratory, objective we tested the relative importance of social dominance and reconciliation (the Machiavellian and Vygotskian intelligence hypotheses, respectively) in predicting theory of mind/false belief. Results indicated that social dominance accounted for significant variance, beyond that related to reconciliation and affiliation, in predicting theory of mind/false belief status. Results are discussed in terms of specific behavioral and social cognitive processes employed in establishing and maintaining social dominance.


International Journal of Disability Development and Education | 2014

Effects of Comprehension Skill on Inference Generation during Reading

Sarah E. Carlson; Paul van den Broek; Kristen L. McMaster; David N. Rapp; Catherine M. Bohn-Gettler; Panayiota Kendeou; Mary Jane White

The purpose of this study was to investigate differences between readers with different levels of comprehension skill when engaging in a causal questioning activity during reading, and the varied effects on inference generation. Fourth-grade readers (n = 74) with different levels of comprehension skill read narrative texts aloud and were asked causal questions at specific points during reading. Responses to questions were examined for the types of inferences the readers made during reading. There was no main effect of comprehension skill in terms of readers’ text-based inferences made in response to the causal questions. However, readers differed in their use of knowledge-based inferences in response to the causal questions, and in particular knowledge-based inferences that connected to related text information. Results are discussed in terms of individual differences that can influence attempts at maintaining coherence during reading.


Journal of Comparative Psychology | 2010

A longitudinal study of preschool children's (Homo sapiens) sex segregation

Catherine M. Bohn-Gettler; Anthony D. Pellegrini; Danielle N. Dupuis; Meghan Hickey; Yuefeng Hou; Cary J. Roseth; David Solberg

In this 2-year longitudinal study, we hypothesized that sex of the human child (Homo sapiens), differences in physical activity, and time of the year would interact to influence preschool childrens sex segregation. We also hypothesized that activity would differentially relate to peer rejection for boys and girls. Consistent with the first hypothesis, high-activity girls started off as the most integrated group but became more segregated with time, whereas high-activity boys remained the most segregated group across the duration of the study. The second hypothesis was also supported: For girls only, activity was significantly related to peer rejection during Year 1 only, the time when high-activity girls also interacted frequently with boys. Results are discussed in terms of sexual selection theory and gender boundary violations.


Discourse Processes | 2014

Does Monitoring Event Changes Improve Comprehension

Catherine M. Bohn-Gettler

During narrative comprehension, reading times increase for changes in time, space, characters, goals, and causation. This study examined the extent to which instructional manipulations modify dimension monitoring during reading and whether this affects comprehension. Sixty-seven participants read three narratives (pretest). Half of the participants (the experimental group) were then instructed to simultaneously monitor changes in time, space, characters, goals, and causation. All participants then read three more narratives (post-test). After reading all texts, participants retold each story and answered comprehension questions. At post-test, the reading times for participants in the experimental group increased for changes in time, space, goals, and causation. Participants in the experimental group remembered more story information containing dimension changes compared with a control group (no instructional manipulation). However, participants in experimental and control groups did not differ in terms of overall memory or performance on comprehension questions. The results indicate that monitoring multiple dimensions simultaneously increases memory for those dimension changes but does not affect overall comprehension.


Archive | 2014

Recess in Primary School: The Disjuncture Between Educational Policy and Scientific Research

Catherine M. Bohn-Gettler; Anthony D. Pellegrini

In recent decades, the role of recess during the school day has been called into question. This chapter addresses the critical issue of whether recess adds value to education by describing research examining the effects of recess on development and achievement. This topic is of critical importance for educational settings and wellbeing: To ensure the best practices are being utilized, school policies should be based on scientific investigations. Thus, research examining recess and play is described.


Discourse Processes | 2017

Effects of Task Relevance Instructions and Topic Beliefs on Reading Processes and Memory

Catherine M. Bohn-Gettler; Matthew T. McCrudden

ABSTRACT This study investigated the effects of task relevance instructions and topic beliefs on reading processes and memory for belief-related text. Undergraduates received task instructions (focus on arguments for vs. against) before reading a dual-position text. In Experiment 1 (n = 88), a reading time methodology showed no differences in reading time for task-relevant and task-irrelevant text, but participants recalled task-relevant text better than task-irrelevant text independently of whether the information was consistent with their topic beliefs. In Experiment 2 (n = 76), a think-aloud methodology showed that participants engaged in confirmation strategies when reading belief-consistent text and disconfirmation strategies when reading belief-inconsistent text, independently of whether the information was relevant to their task instructions. Nonetheless, participants recalled task-relevant text better than task-irrelevant text. The results indicate that task relevance instructions affect memory independently of beliefs but that beliefs affect processing independently of task relevance instructions. Thus, moment-by-moment reading processes and memory for text can operate differently as a function of topic beliefs.


Journal of Research in Reading | 2008

Children's inference generation across different media

Panayiota Kendeou; Catherine M. Bohn-Gettler; Mary Jane White; Paul van den Broek


Learning and Individual Differences | 2012

Making the Right Connections: Differential Effects of Reading Intervention for Subgroups of Comprehenders.

Kristen L. McMaster; Paul van den Broek; Christine A. Espin; Mary Jane White; David N. Rapp; Panayiota Kendeou; Catherine M. Bohn-Gettler; Sarah Carlson


Archive | 2011

When a reader meets a text: The role of standards of coherence in reading comprehension.

Paul van den Broek; Catherine M. Bohn-Gettler; Panayiota Kendeou; Sarah E. Carlson; Mary Jane White

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Cary J. Roseth

Michigan State University

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