February 18, 2014
September 2013 - February 2014 SUMMARY
AUSTRALIAN RESEARCH COUNCIL FUTURE FELLOWSHIP UPDATE
We now entering our final year of reporting on Sharynne
McLeod’s productive and busy ARC Future Fellowship on international speech acquisition in Australia. Sharynne’s blog, Speaking my languages, continues to track her progress so
please check in for regular updates.
As Sharynne said in a summary post in December: “The most important test of this
work is the difference this makes in the lives of children with speech and
language difficulties”. The importance of the work was also reiterated by an
international reviewer of one of Sharynne’s papers: “To my mind, two of the most
important tasks for the profession of speech-language in this century are the
development of assessments for use with multilingual children and children whose
first language is not English and fostering clinician’s awareness of them”.
In mid-November 2013, Sharynne,
Sarah Verdon and Kate Crowe attended the American Speech-Language-Hearing
Association Convention in Chicago, along with 15,000 other delegates, the
largest ASHA Convention on record. While at the convention, Sharynne presented
6.5 hours of technical reports and seminars including a 3-hour short course,
along with co-presenting papers with Sarah and Kate. Many of the international
researchers Sharynne works with and who she has written about on her blog also
attended, providing an excellent opportunity to meet and collaborate.
A major focus for Sharynne and her team in 2014 is the ARC Sound Start project, which commenced last year. The project is
in the data collection phase and by the time the intervention (an innovative
program to promote speech and pre-literacy skills in at-risk preschoolers) is
over, the participating children will have been assessed twice to determine the
outcome of the speech intervention. More children will be included in the
project in 2014 and 2015.
After ten years, Sharynne also concludes her position as
editor of the International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, handing over
to A/Prof Kirrie Ballard, another ARC Future Fellowship holder.
We look forward to following Sharynne’s work again in
2014.
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