Media releases

  • Upcoming webinar to focus on social, emotional and cognitive development of kids

    MEDIA RELEASE: 18 November 2021 – R0125

    Any caregiver, parent, grandparent or teacher who has been flummoxed by a child fibbing, procrastinating or failing to recognize people around them will have a chance to gain some insight from a trio of Brock’s top child development researchers next week.

    Angela Evans, Caitlin Mahy and Catherine Mondloch, faculty members in Brock University’s Department of Psychology, will jointly present “Children’s Social, Emotional and Cognitive Development — What’s happening and why?” a free public webinar hosted by the Lifespan Development Research Institute at Brock as part of its ongoing Speaker Series.

    Evans, who holds a Chancellor’s Chair for Research Excellence for her work on children’s honesty, will present some of her findings.

    “I will be talking about the development of (dis)honesty during childhood and methods for promoting honesty,” says Evans. “Lie-telling begins early in development and improves quite quickly, but many of the methods that successfully improve honesty in children are actually very simple and easy to implement.”

    Mahy will be sharing her latest research on the emergence and development of procrastination in children — a behaviour that can develop as early as age three.

    “As a parent I noticed that my preschool-aged children were constantly putting off things like bedtime and cleaning up messes, so I was especially interested in investigating this topic when an Honours student expressed interest in studying it,” Mahy says.

    Mahy, who undertook the procrastination research with Psychology student Melissa Alunni (BA ’21), who has since graduated but remains involved in the project, and collaborating graduate students Taissa Fuke and Ege Kamber, says that although the research confirmed some of her expectations about procrastination, there were some surprises, too.

    “Our research confirmed a relationship between procrastination and self-control and future thinking, but we weren’t necessarily expecting procrastination to increase with age,” she says. “It seems that as children age, they should learn from their past experiences and get better at completing tasks and not putting them off. However, what we’ve found is that as children get older, they are assigned more tasks that they might not be motivated to complete like household chores or homework, so procrastination becomes more common instead of less so.”

    Mondloch will share her research around face perception and recognition among children, which has been conducted with PhD students Claire Matthews and Sophia Thierry.

    “I will be talking about children’s ability to recognize familiar faces, like those of their parents and teachers, and how first impressions can influence their interpretation of peers’ behaviour,” says Mondloch. “I’ll also discuss why young children make errors when trying to recognize photos of their own teacher, as well as photos of their parents taken before they were born.”

    Evans, Mahy and Mondloch are all affiliated with Growing With Brock, a community outreach initiative comprised of five developmental psychology laboratories at the University that conduct studies with individuals across the entire lifespan.

    Though the pandemic has curbed in-person research, these labs continue to undertake studies online and are always seeking families to take part. For example, Mahy is currently seeking children aged three to five for two studies and Evans is seeking children aged seven to 10. Child participants typically complete tasks involving games, stories or activities with a research assistant. Anyone interested in getting involved in current or future studies through Growing With Brock is encouraged to visit the website to learn more.

    “Children’s Social, Emotional and Cognitive Development — What’s happening and why?” takes place virtually on Wednesday, Nov. 24 from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. The webinar is open to the public and free to attend, but advance registration is required to obtain access to the livestream.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Brock students seeking Garden City Arena memories

    MEDIA RELEASE: 17 November 2021 – R0124

    Hosting everything from hockey and roller derby to lacrosse and concerts, the Garden City Arena has played a significant role in the city of St. Catharines over the past 85 years.

    Now, with the building scheduled to be decommissioned in 2022, Brock University students are working to preserve countless memories linked to the arena for the future.

    Members of the community are invited to share their stories and memories of the Garden City Arena at a community memory collecting drop-in event at the arena on Saturday, Nov. 27 from 1 to 5 p.m.

    Students from HIST/CANA 4F00 (Voices from the Past: Oral History) will be on hand to record people’s memories and photograph or scan physical objects, such as skates, hockey sticks, event flyers and concert ticket stubs.

    “It’s about more than just sports — the arena provides a starting point for exploring broader issues in local, national and even global history, including gender, race and class relations, deindustrialization and urban renewal,” says Associate Professor of History Elizabeth Vlossak.

    The arena’s uncertain future emphasizes the importance of this memory collecting event.”

    “We want to preserve as much of its history as possible now, while we still can — and so much of that history is in people’s memories of the place,” says Vlossak. “We want to learn about people’s relationships with the arena, what it has meant to them, what they have collected and why these things are important to them.”

    Students have been working in partnership with Brock University’s Archives and Special Collections and the St. Catharines Museum to research the history of the arena for upcoming digital exhibits. The collected material will also be made available to researchers and the public through Brock’s Sport and Oral History Archive.

    “I’m looking forward to learning about past events and the thoughts and memories of others who have had more intimate experiences with the history associated with the Garden City Arena,” says History student Ray Borland. “Our oral history project will continue those memories when others read or hear of our discoveries within the completed project.”

    Kathleen Powell, Supervisor of Historical Services at the St. Catharines Museum, is excited to partner with students on the project and to hear people’s memories of the arena.

    “This type of event provides the museum the opportunity to add these oral history stories to our collection so that we can share a diversity of voices in our work and connect these voices and stories to add life to the artifacts within the collection,” she says.

    Those attending the memory collecting event are asked to complete the City of St. Catharines COVID-19 screening in advance, if possible. As per the City’s COVID-19 protocol, please wear a mask and bring proof of vaccination and ID showing birth year. Please note that the museum will not be accepting physical donations at this event.

    Those unable to attend the event are encouraged to submit their memories via the Sport and Oral History website.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Manager Communications and Media Relations, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases