Media releases

  • Brock expert shares children’s mental health tips for new school year

    EXPERT ADVISORY: Sept 7 2023 – R0080

    As children head back to school this week, Danielle Sirianni Molnar says it’s important to ensure they have more than just the proper school supplies.

    The Brock University Associate Professor of Child and Youth Studies and Canada Research Chair in Adjustment and Well-Being in Children and Youth says the changes that come with returning to school can lead to varying outcomes for children’s mental health.

    “For some kids, back to school impacts them in a positive way, as they enjoy school, its routines and seeing their friends and teachers,” she says. “However, for others adjusting to being back in school is difficult and can negatively impact their mental health, especially for children who may not feel comfortable with their peers, have difficulties meeting the school’s academic expectations or have pre-existing mental health problems such as anxiety or depression that can hamper the ability to adapt to significant changes in their lives.”

    For children who find the return to school more challenging, Sirianni Molnar says there is a key strategy they can use to maintain their mental health during the school year.

    “One important strategy kids can use is to create routines that work for them that include eating healthy meals at regular intervals throughout the day, maintaining a healthy and consistent sleep schedule and scheduling consistent times for extracurricular activities and homework,” she says. “Routines are important for all kids because it gives them a sense of security, but they are particularly helpful for kids who are experiencing anxiety because routines reduce uncertainty, which fuels anxiety.”

    While children are encouraged to pay attention to their routines, Sirianni Molnar says parents also play a critical role in providing positive mental health support by looking for changes in their children’s behaviour for a sustained period of time, including alterations in eating, sleeping and physical activity levels, or if they are engaging less with friends, family or activities they were once passionate about.

    “It is especially important to recognize if these changes are affecting their academics, relationships with family and friends or their participation in their extracurricular activities,” she says. “Parents should also be on the lookout for pronounced increases in irritability, sadness, worry or anger as these may be a signal that a child is struggling with their mental health.”

    Along with identifying if their child is struggling, the second step parents can take is regular communication, though this can be uncomfortable at first, Sirianni Molnar says.

    “One suggestion for parents is to try and lessen the directness of the conversation by bringing up the topic of mental health when engaged in another activity,” she says.

    For example, rather than sitting down face to face and having a formal discussion at the table, it may make the child feel less self-conscious by talking while going out for a hike, doing a household chore like folding laundry or for young children, playing with toys.

    “It is key that parents are approachable and ensure their children know that they are cared for and that they matter at all times,” she says. “Often, parents want to solve all of their children’s problems for them, but sometimes it is important for parents to simply listen and validate their children’s concerns.”

    With these strategies in mind, Sirianni Molnar says a final step is for parents and kids to always seek additional help when it is needed.

    “If parents have urgent concerns about their child’s mental health, they should reach out for professional help as soon as possible, such as local health-care providers or hospitals to ensure the safety of their children,” she says.

    Danielle Sirianni Molnar, Brock University Associate Professor of Child and Youth Studies and Canada Research Chair in Adjustment and Well-Being in Children and Youth, is available for media interviews on the topic.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews: 

    * Doug Hunt, Communications and Media Relations Specialist, Brock University dhunt2@brocku.ca or 905-941-6209

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Brock event to explore science behind what draws people to music

    MEDIA RELEASE: Sept 6 2023 – R0079

    Whether its rhythm causes an unconscious sway or its lyrics evoke a swell of emotion, a song can strike a different chord from one set of ears to another.

    An upcoming Brock University event aims to unpack the science behind what drives people to love and connect with the music that they do.

    Presented in partnership with the FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre (PAC), The Music of Listening dives into the art of music making and the science of listening to music. The event will feature the work of Susan Rogers, a professor of cognitive neuroscience in the Music Production and Engineering Department at Berklee College of Music.

    Prior to her academic career, Rogers worked as an accomplished sound engineer and record producer for musicians such as Prince, David Byrne and Barenaked Ladies.

    Tickets for the Tuesday, Oct. 24 event, which takes place from 7 to 9:30 p.m. at the PAC in downtown St. Catharines, are now available for purchase through the art centre’s website and are pay-what-you-can, with a suggested price of $20.

    In addition to sharing stories from her life in the recording industry, Rogers will discuss music cognition and perception, and why individuals are attracted to the types of music they listen to.

    “Your brain over a lifetime of listening to music became finely honed for what I like to call the music of you,” says Rogers. “Your listening brain is different from everyone else’s, which gives you a unique response to any given record.”

    These individual differences are both marvellous and frustrating, she says, from both scientific and record producing perspectives.

    “Even some of the greatest record makers — and I’m thinking of Prince here — did not know for sure what was going to hit,” she says. “It’s a very nuanced and exciting topic.”

    In her talk, Rogers will discuss the seven dimensions of musical listening, or as she describes it, “the seven ways in which a listener can receive a little bit of dopamine, a little neural treat, from listening to a record,” she says.

    Rogers explains that a person might like a certain song because they love dancing to its rhythm or they get emotional listening to its lyrics. Another song might resonate with someone because they find the sound design exciting or it ignites their imagination.

    “I’m hoping listeners will come away with a sense of their own listener profile and a better vocabulary for describing their musical taste,” she says.

    The event will also feature a live music ‘record pull’ with local recording artist Mark Lalama. Rogers and Lalama will take turns playing snippets of music and explaining the features of each song that excite them.

    The record pull’s goal is to hear a song with new ears, says Rogers, “and you may just learn to love another style or type of music.”

    Rogers will be available during the event’s intermission to sign her new book, This Is What It Sounds Like: What the Music You Love Says About You, co-authored with Ogi Ogas. Books can also be purchased on site from local retailer Someday Books.

    Complementing The Music of Listening event will be a film screening of Purple Rain on Thursday, Oct. 19 at 7 p.m. at the FirstOntario Performing Arts Centre. Tickets are $9.50 for the general public, $7.50 for Film House members.

    During her time in Niagara, Rogers will also be giving private lectures to Brock University students and faculty with the Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts and the Faculty of Mathematics and Science.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Doug Hunt, Communications and Media Relations Specialist, Brock University dhunt2@brocku.ca or 905-941-6209

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    Categories: Media releases