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Dive into the research topics where Katherine M. Zinsser is active.

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Featured researches published by Katherine M. Zinsser.


Journal of Genetic Psychology | 2012

Observing Preschoolers’ Social-Emotional Behavior: Structure, Foundations, and Prediction of Early School Success

Susanne A. Denham; Hideko H. Bassett; Sara K. Thayer; Melissa Mincic; Yana S. Sirotkin; Katherine M. Zinsser

ABSTRACT Social-emotional behavior of 352 3- and 4-year-olds attending private childcare and Head Start programs was observed using the Minnesota Preschool Affect Checklist, Revised (MPAC-R). Goals of the investigation included (a) using MPAC-R data to extract a shortened version, MPAC-R/S, comparing structure, internal consistency, test–retest reliability, and stability of both versions; and, using the shortened measure, to examine (b) age, gender, and risk status differences in social-emotional behaviors; (c) contributions of emotion knowledge and executive function to social-emotional behaviors; and (d) contributions of social-emotional behaviors to early school adjustment and kindergarten academic success. Results show that reliability of MPAC-R/S was as good, or better, than the MPAC-R. MPAC-R/S structure, at both times of observation, included emotionally negative/aggressive, emotionally regulated/prosocial, and emotionally positive/productive behaviors; MPAC-R structure was similar but less replicable over time. Age, gender, and risk differences were found. Childrens emotion knowledge contributed to later emotionally regulated/prosocial behavior. Finally, preschool emotionally negative/aggressive behaviors were associated with concurrent and kindergarten school success, and there was evidence of social-emotional behavior mediating relations between emotion knowledge or executive function, and school outcomes. The importance of portable, empirically supported observation measures of social-emotional behaviors is discussed along with possible applications, teacher utilization, and implementation barriers.


Cognition & Emotion | 2012

Preschoolers' emotion knowledge: self-regulatory foundations, and predictions of early school success.

Susanne A. Denham; Hideko H. Bassett; Erin Way; Melissa Mincic; Katherine M. Zinsser; Kelly Graling

Preschoolers (N=322 in preschool, 100 in kindergarten) were assessed longitudinally to examine the self-regulatory roots of emotion knowledge (labelling and situation) and the contributions of emotion knowledge to early school adjustment (i.e., including social, motivational, and behavioural indices), as well as moderation by age, gender, and risk. Age, gender, and risk differences in emotion knowledge were also examined. Emotion knowledge skills were found to be more advanced in older children and those not at economic risk, and in those with higher levels of self-regulation. Overall, the results support the role of emotion knowledge in early school adjustment and academic success even with gender, age, and risk covaried, especially for boys, older preschoolers, and those at economic risk.


Journal of Research in Childhood Education | 2014

“How Would You Feel? What Would You Do?” Development and Underpinnings of Preschoolers’ Social Information Processing

Susanne A. Denham; Hideko H. Bassett; Erin Way; Sara Kalb; Heather Warren-Khot; Katherine M. Zinsser

Young children’s social information processing (SIP) encompasses a series of steps by which they make sense of encounters with other persons; cognitive and emotional aspects of SIP often predict adjustment in school settings. More attention is needed, however, to the development of preschoolers’ SIP and its potential foundations. To this end, a new preschool SIP measure, the Challenging Situations Task (CST), was utilized; preschoolers’ (N = 316) self-reported emotional and behavioral responses to hypothetical peer provocation situations on the CST were assessed longitudinally, along with aspects of their self-regulation and emotion knowledge. Age and developmental differences in CST responses were examined. Next, contributions of executive control and emotion knowledge to CST responses were analyzed. Age differences in emotion and behavior choices showed that younger preschoolers were more prone to choose happy responses, whereas older preschoolers chose more adaptive behavior responses. Self-regulation and emotion knowledge were associated with emotion and behavior responses concurrently and across time. Implications of these findings and suggestions for further research are discussed.


Early Education and Development | 2015

“Practice What You Preach”: Teachers’ Perceptions of Emotional Competence and Emotionally Supportive Classroom Practices

Katherine M. Zinsser; Susanne A. Denham; Timothy W. Curby; Elizabeth A. Shewark

Research Findings: The connections between parents’ emotional competence (emotion expression, regulation, and knowledge) and children’s social–emotional learning (SEL) have been well studied; however, the associations among teachers’ emotional competencies and children’s SEL remain widely understudied. In the present study, private preschool and Head Start teachers (N = 32) were observed using the Classroom Assessment Scoring System. Participating teachers from each center also participated in focus group discussions about emotional competence in preschool classrooms. For analyses, teachers were divided into Moderately and Highly Supportive groups based on observed emotional support quality. Teachers’ focus group responses were compared. Practice or Policy: Comparison groups differed with regard to their discussions of emotion regulation and emotion knowledge. These differences elucidate ways in which intervention programs and in-service training can be developed to help teachers better meet the SEL needs of children.


SAGE Open | 2014

Understanding Preschool Teachers’ Emotional Support as a Function of Center Climate

Katherine M. Zinsser; Timothy W. Curby

There is great emphasis recently on improving the quality of early childhood education in the United States. Within quality rating improvement systems, classroom quality is often reported at the center or program levels. Yet little is known about teaching quality at the center level or the influence of center characteristics on teaching quality. Specifically, this study examines the extent to which the quality of emotional support provided by the teacher is associated with characteristics of the center (e.g., prior turnover rates) and center director (e.g., education, management practices). Findings from Head Start Family and Child Experiences Survey (FACES) 2009 data indicated that emotional support dimensions were differentially predicted by characteristics of the center and the director, including prior teacher turnover rate and director job satisfaction. However, highly regulated indicators of center quality (e.g., student:teacher ratio) did not substantially explain emotional support.


Research in Human Development | 2016

Two Case Studies of Preschool Psychosocial Safety Climates

Katherine M. Zinsser; Anthony Zinsser

With the call from federal and state officials to increase access to high-quality early childhood education only growing louder, programs continue to struggle to attract and support a workforce capable of providing such instruction and care. One critical component of this support is the construction of a workplace environment that teachers perceive as psychologically safe and in which they feel capable of engaging in the challenging work of early childhood education. In the present set of case studies, the authors explore the extent to which a previously developed model of psychosocial safety climate applies to preschool contexts. Using teacher focus groups and administrator interviews the authors present examples of directors’ management practices and center’s policies and procedures that reflect a degree of valuing of teacher well-being and psychological safety. Additionally, the ways teachers’ experiences of the climate relate to their beliefs and behaviors in the classroom are explored.


Early Childhood Education Journal | 2012

Early Childhood Teachers as Socializers of Young Children's Emotional Competence.

Susanne A. Denham; Hideko H. Bassett; Katherine M. Zinsser


Infant and Child Development | 2014

How Preschoolers' Social–Emotional Learning Predicts Their Early School Success: Developing Theory‐Promoting, Competency‐Based Assessments

Susanne A. Denham; Hideko H. Bassett; Katherine M. Zinsser; Todd M. Wyatt


Archive | 2012

The Emotional Basis of Learning and Development in Early Childhood Education

Susanne A. Denham; Katherine M. Zinsser; Chavaughn Brown


Infant and Child Development | 2014

A Mixed-Method Examination of Preschool Teacher Beliefs About Social–Emotional Learning and Relations to Observed Emotional Support

Katherine M. Zinsser; Elizabeth A. Shewark; Susanne A. Denham; Timothy W. Curby

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Erin Way

George Mason University

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Claire G. Christensen

University of Illinois at Chicago

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