Media releases

  • Brock experts share tips for tackling children’s reading challenges

    MEDIA RELEASE: September 18, 2024 – R0115

    Learning to read is no easy feat.

    And for parents whose children are struggling to find momentum, it can be difficult to know how to help.

    Differing brain structures and functions can make learning to read seem like an uphill battle, but there is hope, say two Brock University experts in the field.

    Professor of Child and Youth Studies John McNamara says learning disabilities should be thought of as a difficulty in processing information arising out of small, but important, differences in brain structures that are present at birth.

    He also notes that researchers exploring the genetics of learning disabilities have found a few genes associated with learning disabilities, including those affecting reading.

    “The good news is that our brains are malleable and even though a child may have a genetic-based learning disability, with effective instruction we can shape the brain in ways that can compensate for and reduce these processing difficulties,” says McNamara, an educational psychologist who studies young children with learning and reading disabilities.

    Associate Professor of Child and Youth Studies Erin Panda studies how the brain enables people to understand language, read and control attention. Panda’s educational neuroscience research seeks to know how these processes differ between individuals and change with development, learning and effective intervention.

    Panda says different parts of the brain are involved in the various tasks of learning to read. One part recognizes letters and letter combinations, another stores words and their meanings in our internal ‘dictionary,’ while other parts hear and interpret the sounds of letters and words.

    “The brain is not naturally wired for reading,” says Panda, the co-director of Brock’s Developmental Neuroscience Lab. “To be able to learn how to read and decode words, children must be able to link the activity of those different brain areas together, which is challenging for some children.”

    Panda and McNamara have several tips to guide parents and educators in helping children learn to read.

    They agree that systematic, explicit instruction in the reading process is the most effective way to support children’s reading.

    Panda says a new emphasis in Ontario schools on “structured literacy” has potential to improve reading outcomes for children who find learning to read challenging. This approach teaches children foundational reading skills, such as how to sound out combinations of letters, so they can form representations of letter patterns in their minds to draw upon in other situations.

    As children learn more combinations of letters and their corresponding sounds, they can put these together to build words, she says.

    She points to Bob Books as an example of a “decodable book” that facilitates this process.

    “These are books children can use to develop their sounding-out skills, so that they read on their own and not rely on memorization,” she says.

    Parents and tutors can help, too.

    “We’ve seen that when supported with a strong tutor, even once or twice a week, children with learning disabilities can succeed with reading,” McNamara says. “We’ve even seen changes in the way children’s brains process information as a result of effective tutoring in the reading process.”

    In addition to seeking tutoring support “as early as possible,” McNamara encourages caregivers to look out for biologically based tendencies, such as temperament, and create “an environment that complements or supports these tendencies.”

    “For example, provide quiet spaces for a more reserved child as they’re learning to read, and also give opportunities for this child to practise being outgoing in situations that call for this,” he says.

     

    Professor John McNamara and Associate Professor Erin Panda, both in Brock’s Department of Child and Youth Studies, are available for media interviews on this topic.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    *Sarah Ackles, Communications Specialist, Brock University sackles@brocku.ca or 289-241-5483

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Research offers recommendations to support growth in key Niagara sectors

    MEDIA RELEASE: September 17, 2024 – R0114

    With the right approach, Niagara can continue to be a powerhouse in the key sectors of agribusiness, manufacturing and tourism, says newly released Brock research.

    The latest report by the Niagara Community Observatory (NCO) analyzes the region’s established and emerging sectors and how Niagara Region’s 10-year Economic Development Strategy addresses these areas.

    Supported by funding from the Wilson Foundation, the report also recommends a variety of ways to boost Niagara’s economic resiliency.

    “Like other regions in Canada and worldwide, Niagara is navigating the choppy waters of shifting global markets, emerging technologies like artificial intelligence, unprecedented climate change and the persistent challenges of growing income inequality and job precarity,” says Professor of Political Science and NCO Director Charles Conteh, the report’s lead author. “The recommendations from our study focus on how Niagara can orchestrate change in partnership with public, private and non-profit stakeholders as it navigates these global rapids.”

    The research shows Niagara has excelled in agribusiness in recent years, particularly in the animal food production and farm product wholesaler industries. The region has seen employment growth of 22 per cent in this sector versus two per cent growth in Ontario from 2013 to 2023.

    During that same time, the region’s manufacturing sector saw a 19 per cent increase in employment, compared to five per cent in Ontario and Canada. Key manufacturing areas include animal food production, industrial machinery and furniture.

    Although Niagara’s tourism sector has declined as a whole, there are bright spots. These include scenic and sightseeing water tours, which saw a 305 per cent increase from 2013 to 2023, and recreational vehicle (RV) parks and camps, with a growth of 187 per cent.

    The report identifies several promising trends in the emerging sectors of information communication technology (ICT), health care and the aerospace industry.

    The research team, which includes NCO Research Fellow Nathan Olmstead, Research Associate Felice Martinello and Research Assistant Tia Henstra, calls for policy-makers to adopt the “smart industrial specialization” approach to economic development in Niagara, which involves thinking about subsectors rather than whole sectors.

    “Smart industrial specialization is about identifying and building on Niagara’s core strengths, and the relationships that exist between things like manufacturing, agriculture and tourism within the region,” says Olmstead.

    Other recommendations in the report include creating “industry-led innovation consortia” in which a variety of stakeholders work together to build Niagara’s competitive edge and establishing “industrial corridors” that expand Niagara’s economic reach to nearby markets.

    The report, “The Next Frontier of Economic Development in Niagara: From Concierge to Orchestrator of Change,” was one of several studies presented at the Wilson Foundation Symposium, held at Brock on Tuesday, Sept. 17. The event concludes the two-year Brock-Wilson Foundation partnership on the project “History of Niagara’s economic development in a changing world.”

    Earlier this year, Conteh led a team of Brock researchers, including Olmstead, Martinello, Associate Professor of History Elizabeth Vlossak and Adjunct Professor of History Kimberly Monk that produced a series of papers examining Niagara’s economic history over the past 200 years, presented to the community March 4.

    The Foundation provided Brock with a $500,000 philanthropic investment in support of the initiative, which brought together an interdisciplinary research team focusing on five key economic sectors: hydroelectric power generation, manufacturing and industry, marine transportation, tourism and agribusiness.

    “We are pleased with the outcome of the study and the progress to date of the Brock project,” says L.R. Wilson, the Foundation’s Chairman. “Hopefully, it will help navigate the economic development of the Niagara region well into the future.”

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

     *Sarah Ackles, Communications Specialist, Brock University sackles@brocku.ca or 289-241-5483

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    Categories: Media releases