July 3, 2026

Children Draw Playing data analysis: "How is playing good for the world?"

This morning our team analysed the Children Draw Playing journal about "How is playing good for the world". We had 67 children answer this question.

Dr Jo Grimmond, Prof Sharynne  McLeod, Dr Belinda Downey, Dr Katrina Gersbach, Dr Van H. Tran, Dr Kate Freire
Our overarching themes from the content analysis were:

Playing:

  • fun, good and entertains us (n = 23)
  • keeps us healthy and energetic (n = 17)
  • makes the world happy (n = 16)
  • brings people together (n = 9)
  • we can try new things (n = 9)
  • not good/don’t know (n = 4)

 We discussed the following theories

Classical theories of play

  • Surplus energy theory
  • Recreation or relaxation theory
  • Practice or pre-exercise theory
  • Recapitulation theory

 Contemporary or modern theories of play:

  • Psychoanalytic theory (Freud and Erikson)
  • Arousal-seeking or modulation theory
  • Metacommunicative theory
  • Cognitive theory (Piaget)
  • Sociocultural theory (Vygotsky)

 

CVC2026 - Ducks in a row

This morning Dr Carolyn Gregoric (conference secretary) and I met to discuss CVC2026. The ducks are all in a row! We have really enjoyed using EasyChair as the conference platform to manage all of the papers and reviews. Thanks Carolyn for your fastidious and wise oversight of CVC2026. 


We have just sent out the following email to the 174 teams who have submitted abstracts.

CVC2026 Abstract Outcomes and Invitation to Share Children Draw, Create, Share Belonging

We are pleased to advise that decisions have now been made in relation to all CVC2026 abstract submissions.

Notification emails have been sent to corresponding authors via EasyChair. If you have not received a notification, please log in to EasyChair and check the status of your submission before contacting us, as some notifications may have been filtered into junk or spam folders.
 
We also wanted to share with you details of a new Children’s Voices Centre research project, Children Draw, Create, Share Belonging. The project invites children to share their perspectives on belonging through posters, podcasts, and postcards and provides an important opportunity to centre children’s voices in research.

Further information, including the submission link, is available on the Children’s Voices Centre research page: https://www.csu.edu.au/research/childrens-voices-centre/research.

Please feel free to share this opportunity with your networks, colleagues, families, schools, early childhood settings, services or communities who may be interested in participating or helping to promote the project more widely. These works will be displayed via a global online gallery during the conference.

With thanks

Emma Hayes (she/her)
Senior Administration Officer
Children's Voices Centre
Charles Sturt University, Bathurst, NSW




July 2, 2026

CeTasSSD PhD meeting

Today Felicity, Sarah V and I met to continue discussing Felicity's PhD based within our Catholic Education Tasmania Speech Sound Disorder (CeTasSSD) grant. We have now counted the number of children in 2026 who were assessed using the Diagnostic Evaluation of Articulation and Phonology (DEAP).

  • 210 children have been assessed with the International Speech Screener + DEAP screener  (120 controls + 90 others)
  • 140 students have been assessed with the DEAP Phon (not in the control group)
  •  There are 120 controls (passed ICS, ICS-E and had no teacher concern) (who received ISS, DEAP Screener and DEAP Phon) 


CVC Thursday Research Presentation


Today I provided the CVC Thursday Research Presentation. My topic was "Tips and Tricks for Writing Research CVs to Assist with Grant Writing"

Curriculum vitae (CV) is a Latin word meaning the course of one’s life. An academic’s CV is a comprehensive tool that enables a researcher to collect and analyse data about themselves to support their research endeavours. This workshop will encourage researchers to use their CV to document work that is:
Important 

  • Changes lives: “Will this make a difference?”
  • Generates new knowledge
  • Is of national and international significance

The best you can do

  • Collaborate when you don’t have the knowledge and methodological expertise

Targeted to specific audiences

  • Reviewers, FOR codes, government


McLeod, S. (2014). Undertaking and writing research that is important, targeted, and the best you can do. International Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 16(2), 95-97. https://doi.org/10.3109/17549507.2014.896106


 

 

Indigenous Cadetship at CVC

We had a fantastic meeting with Addison Stewart to discuss the opportunity for the Children's Voices Centre to host one or two Indigenous Cadetships through CSU. We look forward to progressing this opportunity.


July 1, 2026

SACHL implementation research - Cantonese and Mandarin/Putonghua

Tonight (7:30-9:00) I was online with Dr Kate Margetson and a group of speech pathologists who speak Cantonese and/or Mandarin/Putonghua. They were advising us about how to adapt the SACHL for children who speak Cantonese and/or Mandarin/Putonghua. What a useful conversation - great insights were shared.

One participant mentioned https://www.evalubox.com/language-sample for language sampling - but none were aware of a similar tool for speech sampling.