Child and Youth Studies master’s student heads to provincial thesis presentation competition
Three minutes is not a lot of time.
Three minutes is not a lot of time.
The high point of Robert Dimand’s week is the Wednesday graduate lecture he gives. For Sid Segalowitz, one of the greatest perks of his job is working with graduate students.
The number of fall-related injuries reported in Ontario are astonishing. A report released in 2012 by the Ontario Injury Research Centre, based on data from 2007 to 2009, put the number of visits to Ontario hospitals due to falls at just more than 750,000. According to the data, those visits accounted for about 72,000 hospital admissions.
After finishing her undergraduate degree in psychology and child and youth studies at Brock University, Ashley Hobden spent a good part of a year volunteering in impoverished communities in Brazil.
A Brock MA student in Applied Health Sciences hopes to help people living with epilepsy “remove themselves from the shadows.” Suzanne McGuire is a young researcher who is trying to understand the essence of what it means for young women, ages 20 to 35, to live with and to disclose their epilepsy in society.
Graduate students are invited to take a new challenge during this year’s Mapping the New Knowledges Graduate Student Research Conference on Wednesday, April 10.
Youth University has taken another step in its research mandate by establishing two new research prizes for Brock graduate students presenting at the annual Mapping the New Knowledges Graduate Student Research Conference. . . .
Melanie Pilkington, Canada Research Chair in Chemistry, spoke about what makes a successful research and supervisory career at the 2012 Mapping the New Knowledges Graduate Student Research Conference. . . .
A group of MA students in the Social Justice and Equity Studies program at Brock will examine the power of popular media as one of 12 panel presentations at the April 11 Mapping the New Knowledges Graduate Student Research Conference. . . .