I
am very fortunate to be working with a group of outstanding PhD scholars this
year:
Sarah
Verdon (co-supervised
with Sandie Wong)
Topic: Providing
equitable and quality services for multilingual children with speech sound
disorders
Suzanne
Hopf (co-supervised with
Sarah McDonagh)
Topic:
An analysis of speech sound acquisition patterns in simultaneous and sequential
learners of Fijian English
Sarah
Masso (co-supervised
with Elise Baker and Jane McCormack)
Topic:
A Sound Start: innovative technology to promote speech and pre-literacy skills
in academically at-risk preschoolers
Jacqui
Barr (co-supervised with
Graham Daniel)
Topic: “I’m not like most other kids”:
Sibling experiences of disability and implications for education
Kate
Crowe: Submitted 2013
(co-supervised with David McKinnon, Loraine Fordham, Teresa Ching)
Topic:
Multilingual children with hearing loss: Communication and choice
Most
of us were able to meet in Bathurst this week either in person or by Skype (my
students are scattered across NSW and the Pacific). It was good to enable the
team to get to know one another personally and professionally. For Sarah Masso,
this was her first visit to Bathurst and her visit included a tour of the town
and campus. CSU offers PhD studies by distance education, a model that works
successfully and is used by most of my students. Kate Crowe is living proof
that such a model works as she submitted her PhD in February, a month ago, one
month ahead of schedule.
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Kate Crowe, Sarah Masso, Sharynne McLeod, Hannah Wilkin (Honours), Sarah Verdon |
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Sarah Masso's first visit to Bathurst as a PhD student included a tour of the town |
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Dr Sarah McDonagh, Kate Crowe, Suzanne Hopf (on Skype), Sarah Masso, Sarah Verdon |