December 21, 2022

ECV2022 Feedback from survey

We have just compiled the feedback from the ECV2022 survey.

A Google survey was sent to all registrants and 131 responded by 20 December 2022. Overall, 88.6% of respondents ranked the conference as 4-5/5 (1 = poor and 5 = excellent). 


Respondents participated in all aspects of the conference: the online presentations, keynote speakers’ presentations, Children Draw Talking Global Online Gallery, yarning circles and downloaded the ECV2022 Conference Proceedings Book.

Respondents answered three open-ended questions: 

“What did you like about ECV2022? What was good?”. There were 131 open-ended responses that were very positive. Many features of the conference were highlighted including that it was free, online, asynchronous, high quality content, multidisciplinary, multicultural, inclusion of children’s voices, opportunity for discussion (yarning circles). 

“What areas could be improved? Please provide us feedback for future conferences”. While there were 96 responses, 24 (33%) of these indicated that “nothing” could be improved. Most of the responses related to the fact that it was a virtual/online conference, navigation, and more time for discussion.

“What learnings from ECV2022 can you apply in your practice?”.

  • There were 97 responses that embraced a wide range of topics indicating the attendees application to research and practice. For example “I got many fresh perspectives and ideas from the presentations and keynote speakers which I would definitely use or reflect in my practice” (78). 
  • Many of the responses related to specific areas including “innovative ideas about how to be more inclusive of children voices” (81), “How to build relationships” (80), “Building Educator Capacity” (53), “lots of things about education, parenting, children's learning etc” (22) 
  • Some indicated they would use the presentations to inform their research “Ethical and methodological considerations for future research” (56), “Sociocultural theory of child development” (41), “Including children's voices in research” (31) 
  • Some indicated they would use the presentations in their teaching “A range - from effective presentation ideas as a lecturer to content to help with courseware development and overall practice” (57)

Demographics of the survey respondents 

The main profession/disciplines were: academics/researchers, early childhood education, education/teaching, speech-language pathology, students, psychology, social work, nursing 

The countries of the respondents were: Armenia (2), Australia (62), Bangladesh (1), Bolivia (1), Canada (4), Croatia (2), Cyprus (1), Denmark (1), Fiji (2), Ghana (10), Hungary (1), Iceland (5), Indonesia (5), Iran (2), Iraq* (1), Ireland (2), Latvia (4), Luxembourg (2), Netherlands (1), New Zealand (2), Portugal (1), Rwanda (1), Saudi Arabia (2), Spain (2), United Kingdom (4), United States of America (7), Vietnam (1)

December 20, 2022

American Board of Child Language and Language Disorders

Recently the American Board of Child Language and Language Disorders have updated their map. I am the only non-American to be invited to join the board. Now their map includes me!



December 19, 2022

Wrapping up the year

2022 has been a challenging - and fulfiling year. I have had a lot of health issues this year - and thankfully these now have all resolved. I am grateful to the wonderful team of students and colleagues who I work with. This week is about wrapping up 2022 before I go on a month's leave.

PhD and honours students

  • Holly McAlister - currently finalising her PhD endorsement for presentation in 2023
  • Kate Margetson - presented her PhD endorsesment last week, analysing data and writing papers
  • Belinda Downey - finalising her PhD for submission in March 2023
  • Caitlin Hurley - collecting data in the dental hospital
  • Marie Ireland - writing her exegesis for submission in 2023
  • Anniek van Doornik - finalising papers on SSD in Netherlands
  • Van Tran - graduation and winning best thesis award for CSU
  • Sarah Faulks - honours student - currently analysing VLS data
Holly McAlister, Sharynne, Suzanne Hopf

Accomplishments during 2022

  • Early Childhood Voices Confererence 2022 (ECV2022)
  • Co-editing the special issue of IJSLP "Communication, Swallowing and the Sustainable Development Goals"
  • Finalising the VietSpeech grant
  • Keynote presentations across the world (virtual)
  • Attending and presenting at the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) convention in New Orleans (Nov 2022)
  • Editing the Oxford Handbook of Speech Development in Languages of the World (OUP)
  • Co-editing Early Childhood Voices (Springer)
  • Media presentations including drive time with Virginia Trioli on ABC radio, Melbourne
  • Awards
  • Publications and presentations
  • Making a difference in children's lives across the world

December 14, 2022

Communication for all and the Sustainable Development Goals

The following paper has been accepted for publication today:

McLeod, S. & Marshall, J. E. (in press). Communication for all and the Sustainable Development Goals. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology.  

Purpose. Communication is central to the accomplishment of each of the United Nations’ 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and is a fundamental human right. 

Method. This special issue of International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology (IJSLP, vol. 25, no. 1) was dedicated to communication, swallowing and the SDGs; particularly focussing on people with communication and/or swallowing disability and those who support them. 

Result. This special issue of IJSLP demonstrates that successful communication is necessary for realisation of all 17 SDGs at both a global and an individual level and advances the international call for SDG 18: Communication for All. The 36 papers address all 17 goals, focussing on poverty, hunger, health, education, work, innovation, climate, cities, land, oceans, justice, and partnerships. Authors worked and undertook their research in Australia, Austria, Benin, Cambodia, Cameroon, Canada, China, Columbia, Denmark, Egypt, Ethiopia, Ghana, Greece, Iceland, India, Iraq, Ireland, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Lebanon, Maldives, Mozambique, Nepal, New Zealand, Nigeria, State of Palestine, Peru, Philippines, Rwanda, Serbia, South Africa, Uganda, UK, USA, Vietnam. 

Conclusion. Communication for all is essential for the achievement of the SDGs, “peace and prosperity for people and the planet” (United Nations, 2015a). The achievement of the SDGs is the role of all; including communication professionals, people with communication/swallowing disability, their families and communities.

Oxford University Press Handbook - next stages

Today I have been working on The Oxford Handbook of Speech Development in Languages of the World. I had a great discussion with Dr. Chelsea Sommer from Miami, about a new chapter on Peruvian Spanish Speech Development. Then I worked with Dr. Mark Filmer from CSU who is going to copyedit the final chapters. Last week I worked with Dr. Helen Blake from UTS who is working with me on a project to translate the information within the chapters into online and accessible presentations. This work has been approved by Oxford University Press and is going to be a great addition to the resources about speech development across the world.

Chelsea Sommer (USA), Sharynne, and Mark Filmer (CSU)

Helen Blake (UTS) and Sharynne

IJSLP special issue: Communication, Swallowing and the Sustainable Development Goals

I am delighted to report that today all papers have been accepted for the IJSLP special issue: Communication, Swallowing and the Sustainable Development Goals. 

The 36 papers address all 17 goals, focussing on poverty, hunger, health, education, work, innovation, climate, cities, land, oceans, justice, and partnerships. 

Authors worked and undertook their research in Australia, Austria, Benin, Cambodia, Cameroon, Canada, China, Columbia, Denmark, Egypt, Ethiopia, Ghana, Greece, Iceland, India, Iraq, Ireland, Italy, Jordan, Kenya, Lebanon, Maldives, Mozambique, Nepal, New Zealand, Nigeria, State of Palestine, Peru, Philippines, Rwanda, Serbia, South Africa, Uganda, UK, USA, Vietnam.

Thanks to  

  • Co-guest editor: Julie Marshall from Manchester Metropolitan University, UK
  • IJSLP editors: Libby Cardell and Natalie Munro
  • IJSLP Taylor and Francis staff
  • Authors from across the world who are doing great work with people with communication disability and communication professionals. 

There are a few papers that still need page proofs finalised - then the special issue will be ready for publication as volume 25(1) in 2023.

Julie Marshall, Sharynne McLeod, Libby Cardell, Natalie Munro

A blank slate again - all papers have been finalised :)

December 13, 2022

ECV2022-FINAL DATA

Congratulations to everyone on ECV2022

https://earlychildhoodresearch.csu.domains/early-childhood-voices-conference-2022/

Here are the final numbers during our conference (5-11 December 2022)

  • 1,956 registrations 
  • Registrations from 72 countries: Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Belgium, Bolivia, Botswana, Brazil, Cambodia, Canada, Chile, China, Cook Islands, Costa Rica, Croatia, Cyprus, Denmark, Ethiopia, Fiji, France, Germany, Ghana, Granada, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Iraq, Iran, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Korea, Latvia, Luxembourg, Malta, Mexico, Moldova, Myanmar, Nepal, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nigeria, Oman, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Réunion, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, Tonga, Turkey, United Arab Emirates (UAE), United Kingdom (includes England, Regno Unito, Northern Ireland, Scotland), United States of America, Vanuatu, Vietnam, Zambia, Zimbabwe

*Google Analytics

  • 6,431 views from 1,358 users
  • A total of 51 countries viewed the ECV2022 website that were registered using Google Analytics. The top 10 countries were: Australia (681 users), UK (125), US (105), Ghana (77), Bangladesh (73), Ireland (48), Canada (38), Indonesia (28), Iceland (15) and Netherlands (14). The remaining countries were: Latvia, New Zealand, Spain, Vietnam, Philippines, Fiji, China, Croatia, Germany, South Africa, Iran, Luxembourg, Belgium, Greece, Hong Kong (SAR China), Turkey, Bolivia, Finland, France, Portugal, Singapore, Sweden, Armenia, Denmark, Hungary, India, Myanmar (Burma), Saudi Arabia, Switzerland, Austria, Brazil, Cambodia, Chile, Italy, Nigeria, Norway, Poland, Serbia, Slovenia, Thailand, Uganda.
  • Top 20 pages: Children Draw Talking Gallery 1 (277), Keynote 1 (261), Keynote 5 (143), Keynote 6 (142),  Children Draw Talking Gallery 3 (138), Keynote 2 (124), Keynote 3 (116), Keynote 4 (116), Yarning circles (99), Paper 224 (66), Paper 202 (65), Children Draw Talking Gallery 4 (58), Paper 265 (57), Paper 201 (55), Paper 212 (55), Paper 211 (49), Paper 278 (49), Paper 283 (49), Paper 243 (47), Paper 228 (45), Paper 272 (41), Paper 225 (40).
  • People went to ECV2022 directly (1,402 sessions), via social media (462), by searching (192), referral (169), and other means.
  • People viewed via web/mobile (697), web/desktop (640), web/tablet (22)

*YouTube data

  • 3,517 views (1,284 unique views) - 243 hours of viewing
  • Top videos: Keynote 1 (175), Children Draw Talking Gallery 1 (156), Keynote 6 (148), Keynote 5 (106), Keynote 2 (105), Paper 220 (99), Keynote 3 (83), Paper 224 (78), Paper 269 (74), Children Draw Talking Gallery 3 (70), Keynote 4 (69), Paper 289 (62)
     

*Yarning circle summary (attendees/registrations) 

  • YC1 Families  - 13/65 
  • YC2 Communication  - 23/67 
  • YC3 Professional  - 13/50 
  • YC4 Children  - 15/50 
  • YC5 Children's rights and Sustainable Development Goals  - 12/47

*Children Draw Talking Global Online Gallery https://earlychildhoodresearch.csu.domains/early-childhood-voices-conference-2022/children-draw-talking-gallery-1-the-world/

  • 191 drawings
  • 21 countries: (Africa), Armenia, Australia, Bangladesh, Canada, China, Croatia, Fiji, Ghana, Greece, Hong Kong SAR, Hungary, Indonesia, Iran, Latvia, Netherlands, New Zealand, Poland, Spain, United Kingdom, United States

All the videos will remain online – so everyone is able to continue viewing the content.

 

 

Maximising the Impact of Speech and Language Therapy for children with Speech Sound Disorder (The MISLToe-SSD Study)

I have been invited to be on the international Delphi panel for the Maximising the Impact of Speech and Language Therapy for children with Speech Sound Disorder (The MISLToe-SSD Study). The aim of MISLToe-SSD is to develop a core outsome set (COS) and mimimum dataset of common data elements (CDE) for interventions for speech sound disorder (SSD). This study is funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) and sponsored by the North Bristol NHS Trust. 

Background to MISLToe-SSD study 

"Prevalence of speech sound disorder (SSD) is high, with upwards of 76,000 children referred to NHS Speech and Language Therapy (SLT) services annually. NHS SLT is provided to children with SSD via a range of care pathways, typically defined by resource constraints, rather than robust evidence. These care pathways and methods for collecting data on their outcomes vary between services making it difficult to determine which care pathways lead to better outcomes. This diversity in service provision and lack of uniformity in the collection of important data also makes it very difficult to carry out much needed research in a clinical setting for this population of children.  

There is a need to identify which care pathways are associated with the best outcomes and are most cost-effective within the service constraints of the NHS. Effective treatment will reduce the number of children with SSD who have persistent problems and associated impacts. It will reduce time missed from school and burden of care for families and maximise efficiency and cost of NHS SLT services. Ultimately, this research will support the NHS to deliver the national government priority of providing high quality, safe and sustainable health care"

December 12, 2022

2022 publications using the Intelligibility in Context Scale

Norming and/or validation of the ICS 

INDONESIA – Natalia, C., Pratomo, H. T. A., & Sarwanto, A. (2022). Speech intelligibility In preschoolers using Indonesian Intelligibility In Context Scale. Jurnal Keterapian Fisik, 7(2), 95–104. https://doi.org/10.37341/jkf.v0i0.373 

 IRAN (PERSIAN/FARSI)– Aghaz, A., Kazemi, Y., Hemmati, E., & Zarifian, T. (2022). Psychometric properties of Persian version of Intelligibility Context Scale in Persian-speaking children. The Scientific Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 10(6), 1270-1283. https://doi.org/10.32598/sjrm.10.6.22 

TURKEY – Şanlı, N., & Evci, M. (2022). Bağlam içi anlaşılırlık ölçeğini: iç tutarlılık ve geçerlilik [Intelligibility in Context Scale: Internal consistency and validity]. Dil, Konuşma ve Yutma Araştırmaları Dergisi, 5(1), 1-22. 

VIETNAM – Le, X. T. T., McLeod, S., & Phạm, B. (2022). Consonant accuracy and intelligibility of Southern Vietnamese children. Speech, Language and Hearing, 25(3), 315-324. https://doi.org/10.1080/2050571X.2021.1888195 

ICS with children with speech sound disorders 

HONG KONG (SAR CHINA) – To, C. K. S., McLeod, S., Sam, K. L & Law, T. (2022). To, C. K. S., McLeod, S., Sam, K. L., & Law, T. (2022). Predicting which children will normalize without intervention for speech sound disorders. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 65(5), 1724-1741. https://doi.org/10.1044/2022_JSLHR-21-00444

ICS with children with childhood apraxia of speech 

ITALY – Bombonato, C., Casalini, C., Pecini, C., Angelucci, G., Vicari, S., Podda, I., Cipriani, P., Chilosi, A. M., & Menghini, D. (2022). Implicit learning in children with childhood apraxia of speech. Research in Developmental Disabilities, 122, 104170. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ridd.2021.104170 

ICS with children with VPI 

Hashemi Hosseinabad, H., Washington, K. N., Boyce, S. E., Silbert, N., & Kummer, A. (2022). Agreements of intelligibility in children with velopharyngeal insufficiency: The relationship between Intelligibility in Context Scale and experimental measures. Folia Phoniatrica et Logopaedica, 74, 17-28. https://doi.org/10.1159/000516537

Kate Margetson's PhD endorsement

Today, School of Education PhD student Kate Margetson presented her PhD research proposal at an Endorsement of Candidature session. 

Kate’s thesis title is: Supporting English-Speaking Professionals to Work with Bilingual Vietnamese-English-Speaking Children. Her study is supervised by Professor Sharynne McLeod and Associate Professor Sarah Verdon 

Proposal Abstract: Culturally responsive practice that values multilingualism is needed for education and health professionals to provide equitable service to multilingual children and their families. Extensive studies have identified that professionals lack knowledge and skills for assessing multilingual children’s speech, especially when they do not speak the same languages. While assessing children in all the languages that they speak is recommended, often professionals rely on English assessments. There are no guidelines for how professionals can transcribe multilingual children’s speech, which likely contributes to speech sound disorders being under- or over-diagnosed in multilingual children. The proposed research aims to investigate how English-speaking professionals can assess and diagnose speech sound disorders in bilingual Vietnamese-English-speaking children, using a mixed methods research design. A research protocol for multilingual speech transcription will be designed and tested with Vietnamese-English-speaking children and adults. Speech profiles of bilingual Vietnamese-English-speaking children will be used to explore the interaction between Vietnamese and English, the impact of ambient phonology on acquisition, characteristics of typical acquisition versus speech sound disorder, and the subsequent importance of assessing both Vietnamese and English. An implementation science approach will be adopted to develop and test an online tool for professionals to learn how to assess and transcribe children’s speech in Vietnamese. This body of work seeks to bridge the gap between research and practice by equipping professionals with practical guidelines and transcription skills so that they can provide a culturally responsive, equitable service when assessing multilingual children’s speech.

Congratulations Kate!


Making information about children's speech development available to the world

Dr Helen Blake from UTS and I have been working steadily on a project to make information about children's speech development available to the world. I have enjoyed our planning phase during 2022 and look forward to our implementation phase in 2023.



December 9, 2022

ECV2022 Day 5

What an amazing conference we have held this week. Some of the world still haven't woken to Friday 9th December, so these are not quite the final figures - but they give us good insight into the reach of the conference.

1,952 registrations from 72 countries: Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Belgium, Bolivia, Botswana, Brazil, Cambodia, Canada, Chile, China, Cook Islands, Costa Rica, Croatia, Cyprus, Denmark, Ethiopia, Fiji, France, Germany, Ghana, Granada, Greece, Hong Kong, Hungary, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Iraq, Iran, Ireland, Israel, Italy, Jamaica, Korea, Latvia, Luxembourg, Malta, Mexico, Moldova, Myanmar, Nepal, Netherlands, New Zealand, Nigeria, Oman, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Réunion, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, Tonga, Turkey, United Arab Emirates (UAE), United Kingdom (includes England, Regno Unito, Northern Ireland, Scotland), United States of America, Vanuatu, Vietnam, Zambia, Zimbabwe 

*Yarning circle summary (attendees/registrations) 

  • YC1 Families  - 13/65 
  • YC2 Communication  - 23/67 
  • YC3 Professional  - 13/50 
  • YC4 Children  - 15/50 
  • YC5 Children's rights and Sustainable Development Goals  - 12/47 

*Google Analytics - 5,679 views from 1,233 users. The top 10 countries were: Australia, UK, Ghana, US, Bangladesh, Ireland, Canada, Indonesia, Iceland, and Netherlands. People went to ECV2022 directly (1,219 users), via social media (424 users), by searching (168 users) and other means.

*Children Draw Talking Global Online Gallery - 191 drawings

This morning at 8am I supported Dr Jessamy Davies to host the Yarning Circle focussed on Children's rights and Sustainable Development Goals. Some of the comments that the participants wrote in the chat:

  • “This conference has been fantastic for hearing lots of different perspectives from people from different professional backgrounds and disciplines. I've been learning a lot, thank you!”
  • “It's definitely a prompt to re-read [the Convention on the Rights of the Child] as it's been quite a while since I have read them, and I don't think we listen enough to children, families and educators!”
  • “Thank you very much for organising the conference. It was a great experience. It it valuable to have access to the resources after the last day of the conference.” 
Dr Jessamy Davies and Sharynne after Yarning Circle 5

At the end of the day, Dr Carolyn Gregoric and I met to celebrate how wonderful ECV2022 was this week - and how nothing seemed to go wrong :)

Dr Carolyn Gregoric and Sharynne at the end of ECV2022


Australian Multicultural Health Collaborative

I have just applied for membership for the Australian Multicultural Health Collaborative https://multiculturalhealth.org.au/
The Collaborative intends to work at the national level to give a voice to the broad health and wellbeing needs, including research, of Australia’s culturally and linguistically diverse (CALD) communities.

December 8, 2022

ECV2022 - Day 4

At 9:30am on Day 4 (Thurs 8th December) 

Eventbrite

  • 1946 registations
  • Participants from 70 countries Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Argentina, Armenia, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Belgium, Botswana, Brazil, Cambodia, Canada, Chile, China, Cook Islands, Costa Rica, Croatia, Cyprus, Denmark, Dubai, Ethiopia, Fiji, Germany, Ghana, Granada, Hong Kong (SAR China), Hungary, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Iraq, Iran, Ireland, Italy, Jamaica, Korea, Latvia, Luxembourg, Malta, Mexico, Moldova, Myanmar, Nepal, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Oman, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Réunion, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, Tonga, Turkey, United Kingdom, United States, Vanuatu, Vietnam, Zambia, Zimbabwe

Google analytics report

  • 4,807 views from 1,102 users
  • Top hits: Children Draw Talking Gallery 1 (218), Keynote 1 (210), Keynote 6 (110), Keynote 5 (105), Keynote 2 (98), Keynote 3 (97), Keynote 4 (88), Yarning circles (79), Children Draw Talking Gallery 3 (77), Children Draw Talking Gallery 4, Paper 224 (45), Paper 201 (44), Paper 202 (44), Paper 243 (43)

December 7, 2022

IJSLP board meeting

Tonight I enjoyed participating in the 2022 International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology Editorial Board meeting. Congratulations to the editors Libby Cardell and Natalie Munro on the excellent quality of papers and the trajectory of the journal.

2021 statistics: IJSLP had 319,000 downloads/views. The journal’s 2021 Impact Factor is 1.820 and 5 Year Impact Factor is 2.358. IJSLP is rated Q1 Impact Factor Best Quartile and the 2021 Cite Score is 3.7. It has a 27% acceptance rate.

I was delighted to see that two of our papers were in the most cited for 2021:

McGill, N., Crowe, K., & McLeod, S. (2020). “Many wasted months”: Stakeholders’ perspectives about waiting for speech-language pathology services. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 22(3), 313–326. https://doi.org/10.1080/17549507.2020.1747541 [11 citations]

McLeod, S., Davis, E., Rohr, K., McGill, N., Miller, K., Roberts, A., Thornton, S., Ahio, N., & Ivory, N. (2020). Waiting for speech-language pathology services: A randomised controlled trial comparing therapy, advice and device. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 22(3), 372–386. https://doi.org/10.1080/17549507.2020.1731600 [10 citations]

Additionally, the article with the top Altmetric score was ours:

McLeod, S. (2018). Communication rights: Fundamental human rights for all. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 20(1), 3–11. https://doi.org/10.1080/17549507.2018.1428687 [191 altmetric score]

ECV2022 Day 3

Day 3 and the numbers are climbing...
  • 1,938 registrations
  • 4,008views
  • 945 users 
  • 190 drawings

December 6, 2022

CSU FOAE Researcher of the Year; Research Excellence through Partnership; AND Research Thesis of the Year

I received this welcome email thils morning:

"The Charles Sturt Research Awards Panel has completed its deliberations and we are delighted to inform you that you have been awarded both the 

Faculty of Arts and Education Researcher of the Year and the 

Research Excellence through Partnership prizes. 

Many congratulations for your fantastic contribution to the University! We would like to invite you to the Research Awards Dinner on 23rd February 2023 to receive the awards from the Vice Chancellor.

Professor Mark Evans (Chair) on behalf of the Awards Committee

Shortly afterwards our PhD student received this email: 

Dear Dr Van Tran, The Charles Sturt Research Awards Panel has completed its deliberations and we are delighted to inform you that you have been awarded both the

Faculty of Arts and Education Higher Degree by Research Thesis of the Year prize and the

joint winner of the overall Charles Sturt Research Thesis of the Year prize

This is an award for outstanding research undertaken by an HDR student.

Many congratulations for your fantastic contribution to the University! We would like to invite you to the Research Awards Dinner on 23rd February 2023 to receive the awards from the Vice Chancellor.

Professor Mark Evans (Chair) on behalf of the Awards Committee
Dr Van Tran receiving her PhD at graduation in August 2022




Subject:

Vice-Chancellor's 2022 Research Excellence Awards

 

 

Date:

07-DEC-22

Subject:

Vice-Chancellor's 2022 Research Excellence Awards

 

Message:

The Charles Sturt Research Awards Panel has completed its deliberations and have recommended the following award winners to the Vice Chancellor:

Teaching Scholar of the Year - Dr Nicole Sugden, School of Psychology, Faculty of Business, Justice and Behavioural Sciences
An award for a teaching focused academic (including casual staff) engaged in high quality "scholarship informed" teaching practice.

Researcher/Research Team of the Year
An award for outstanding research with outcomes extending beyond the University and commendation awards for a researcher/research team from each Faculty.

Faculty of Arts and Education: Professor Sharynne McLeod
Faculty of Business: Dr Ashad Kabir
Faculty of Science and Health: Professor Chris Blanchard
Overall winner: Professor Chris Blanchard

Excellence as an Early Career Researcher
An award for outstanding research undertaken by an early career researcher and commendation awards for a researcher from each Faculty.

Faculty of Arts and Education: Dr Jane Garner
Faculty of Business: Dr Tyson Whitten
Faculty of Science and Health: Dr Nidhish Francis
Overall joint winners: Dr Nidhish Francis and Dr Jane Garner

Higher Degree by Research Thesis of the Year
An award for outstanding research undertaken by an HDR student and commendation awards for an HDR student from each Faculty.

Faculty of Arts and Education: Dr Van Tran
Faculty of Business: Dr Scott McManus
Faculty of Science and Health: Dr Helenna Mihailou
Overall winner: Dr Van Tran

Excellence in HDR Supervision - Professor Chris Blanchard
An award for outstanding supervision of Higher Degree Research students.

Research Excellence through Partnership
An award recognising the importance of university researchers initiating, developing, and managing high quality research partnerships with community, industry or international partners.
Winner: Waiting for Speech Pathology Team - Professor Sharynne McLeod, Dr Nicole McGill, Dr Kathryn Crowe, Dr Suzanne Hopf, Dr Cen (Audrey) Wang, and Dr Nicola Ivory

Award winners will receive their awards from the Vice Chancellor at the Research Awards Dinner on 23rd February 2023. Details will follow. The Awards Dinner was postponed to the new year due to the impact of the NSW floods.

Please join me in congratulating the award winners.

Mark Evans, DVCR

Keynote at Bilinguistics Conference in 2023

I have been invited to present a keynote address at the Bilinguistics conference in the US in 2023:

The theme of the 4-Day Virtual Conference – Effectively Evaluate and Treat Speech Sound Disorders in Any Language  and it runs from Monday, January 16th – Thursday, January 19th

https://bilinguistics.com/slp-conference-presentations/


Here are the promo videos for the conference:

McLeod 1 How Does an Assessment Look Different for a Monolingual Child, Bilingual Child, or a Child That Speaks Multiple Languages? 

McLeod 2 What Are Your Go-To Resources for Assessing Multilingual Children? 

https://www.csu.edu.au/research/multilingual-speech/home

McLeod 3 There is a wide range in developmental norms. How do we deal with this in practice? 

McLeod 4 Understanding the difference between evidence-based practice and practice-based evidence

https://www.jr-press.co.uk/creating-practice-based-evidence.html

McLeod 5 A Summary of Current Speech Acquisition Data Across 27 Languages

December 5, 2022

ECV2022 in the news

The Early Childhood Voices 2022 Conference (ECV2022) is in the news: https://earlychildhoodresearch.csu.domains/early-childhood-voices-conference-2022/ 

CSU news stories 

Media

  • 2BS radio interview - 5 December 3:30pm

Details

Over 1800 registrations from 70 countries 6 keynotes, 99 presentations, 180 children’s drawings of talking

ECV2022 Day 1

Registrations: 1852 

  • Yarning 1 registrations 44 
  • Yarning 2 registrations 41 
  • Yarning 3 registrations 37 
  • Yarning 4 registrations 36 
  • Yarning 5 registrations 36

 Page views: 2,335 views; 607 users

Top 10 countries for day 1: Australia, Ghana, UK, US, Ireland, Bangladesh, Indonesia, Iceland, Netherlands, Latvia 



 

December 1, 2022

ECV2022 final preparations

ECV2022 will begin on Monday 5th December. We are finalising this exciting event.

Here are the statistics today:

  • 1659 registrations from 70 countries
  • 181 drawings from children
  • 100 presentations to view (6 keynotes and 94 presentations - 99 presentations were accepted)
  • 5 yarning circles 
  • ECV2022 participants’ countries: Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Belgium, Botswana, Brazil, Cambodia, Canada, Chile, China, Cook Islands, Costa Rica , Croatia, Cyprus, Denmark, Dubai, Ethiopia, Fiji, Germany, Ghana, Granada, Hong Kong SAR China, Hungary, Iceland, India, Indonesia, Iraq, Iran, Ireland, Italy, Jamaica, Korea, Latvia, Luxembourg, Malta, Mexico, Moldova, Myanmar, Nepal, Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Oman, Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Qatar, Réunion, Rwanda, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, Slovenia, South Africa, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Taiwan, Thailand, Tonga, Turkey, United Kingdom, United States, Vanuatu, Vietnam, Zambia, Zimbabwe

 

Our welcome video is here  

Penultimate meeting before the conference:
Patrick McKenzie, Sharynne McLeod, Shukla Sikder, Carolyn Gregoric

Conference co-chairs, Sharynne McLeod and Shukla Sikder
recording the ECV2022 welcome message with Kevin Ng


Final meeting before the conference: Carolyn, Sharynne, Shukla, Patrick