“…Although these have been primarily examined in the context of reading comprehension, recent studies indicate that these language and cognitive skills are also related to children's listening comprehension. Evidence includes working memory (Florit et al, 2009(Florit et al, , 2013Kim, 2016 ;Was & Woltz, 2007 ), vocabulary (Florit et al, 2009 ;Florit, Roch, & Levorato, 2014 ;Kendeou, Bohn-Gettler, White, & van den Broek, 2008 ;Kim, 2016 ;Tompkins et al, 2013 ), grammatical knowledge (Carrow-Woolfolk, 1999 ;Kim, 2015Kim, , 2016Tunmer, 1989 ), inference (Florit et al, 2014 ;Kendeou et al, 2008 ;Kim, 2016 ;Lepola et al, 2012 ;Tompkins et al, 2013 ), theory of mind (Kim, 2015(Kim, , 2016Kim & Phillips, 2014 ) and comprehension monitoring (Kim, 2015 ;Kim & Phillips, 2014 ). It is of note that these theoretical models assume that the same processes are hypothesized to be involved in text comprehension across languages.…”