Media releases

  • International recruiters get Brock experience

    MEDIA RELEASE: 30 April 2018 – R00089

    They’re the people helping to sell the Brock brand around the world, and on Sunday, they got a closer look at what makes the Brock University experience so unique.

    Like most Canadian post-secondary institutions, Brock works with third-party academic recruitment agents who help attract international students in dozens of countries.

    On Sunday, April 29 more than 65 academic recruitment agents from 21 countries arrived in Niagara as part of a three-day educational familiarization tour in partnership with Niagara College and the District School Board of Niagara.

    The timing of the tour lined up with the conclusion of the International Consultants for Education and Fairs North American Workshop conference in Toronto.

    Normally separated by thousands of kilometres and multiple time zones, the conference gave Brock rare access to a large number of international recruitment agents.

    The agents play a vital role in the recruitment process for international students. As experts in their field, students rely on their knowledge and expertise to recommend where to study based on their needs. Partnering with agents also ensures access to students from areas of the world not regularly travelled by Brock’s own team of international recruitment officers.

    “The agents know their own educational systems and the social and cultural details of their own societies,” said Tom Dunk, Brock’s Interim Vice-President, Academic. “For this reason, they’re well-positioned to assist us in the search for students who are both qualified for our programs, and most likely to benefit from the Brock experience.”

    Gaining international experience by studying abroad is becoming increasingly popular and Canada is seen by many students as an ideal destination.

    Known around the world as a welcoming, multicultural society, Canada has a high-quality standard of education that is globally recognized. In addition, students who complete a four-year degree program or a two-year master’s program are eligible for a three-year work permit, providing them with valuable career experience to bring back home.

    Combined with the affordability of living in Niagara and the beauty of studying at a campus located in a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve, the region is becoming an increasingly popular choice for prospective students. Brock is now home to more than 1,900 international students from 100 countries.

    “Diversity enhances the academic experience by exposing students to different ideas, cultures and experiences,” said Leigh-Ellen Keating, Director of Brock International. “A more culturally aware student is better equipped with the tools and skills to succeed in a rapidly changing, highly diverse and competitive global economy.”

    In attendance on Sunday’s tour were agents from more than 20 countries, including Brazil, India, Mexico, Turkey and Vietnam. Hosted by Brock senior administration and the University’s International Market Development, agents were provided a tour of the campus, listened to presentations from several departments and participated in breakout sessions to learn more about specific areas of interest, such as ESL, admissions, international student services and the Marilyn I. Walker School of Fine and Performing Arts.

    Hannah Tran, an agent from Vietnam’s America-Euro Training and Overseas Study Consultation Company, said students often find job opportunities after studying in Niagara.

    “The proximity to Toronto, combined with a high-quality level of education for a more affordable price when you consider the cost of living is what makes Niagara an attractive area for international students,” she said.

    The day concluded with a tree-planting ceremony near Cairns Family Health and Bioscience Research Complex to commemorate the visit.

    The agents remain in Niagara Monday and Tuesday with tours of Niagara College, Welland’s Centennial Secondary School and a trip to Niagara Falls.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

    Brock University Marketing and Communications has a full-service studio where we can provide high definition video and broadcast-quality audio.

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    Categories: Media releases

  • Three Brock student videos among Top 15 of national science research contest

    MEDIA RELEASE: 26 April 2018 – R00088

    A Brock University student has scored third place in a national science research video contest, with two other Brock student videos among the contest’s Top 15 finalists.

    Science, Action! features student-produced, 60-second videos on research projects funded by the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC), one of Brock’s major research funders.

    Taylor Lidster took third place with her video, On the Fly. Two other videos – produced by Matthew Mueller and the team of Zakia Dahi and Jina Nanayakkara — were included in the Top 15 of finalists from universities across Canada.

    All four students are from the Department of Biological Sciences. Mueller, Dahi and Lidster are master’s students, while Nanayakkara has just completed her undergraduate degree.

    Their videos explore how fruit flies help us better understand the human gut, how cells chat with one another, and how genes “jump.”

    “It’s wonderful to see Brock student researchers being recognized nationally, both for the excellence of their research projects and for their ability to explain the impact and significance of their work,” says Brock Vice-President, Research Tim Kenyon.

    “The remarkable extent of Brock students’ success in the Science, Action! program is a powerful indication of their calibre, and a great credit to the training and research mentorship they receive from Brock University professors,” he says.

    Lidster’s On the Fly shows how the fruit fly is used to study inflammation in the gut. The researchers use genetic techniques and microscopy to see any changes in the gut environment, good or bad.

    Mueller’s Cell Talk explains that the root cause of several contemporary diseases is a disruption in communication between cells, examines the language that cells use to talk to one another, and describes how this changes in diseases such as Alzheimer’s and cancer.

    DNA: A Mobile Molecule, by Dahi and Nanayakkara, explores how DNA sequences that move around – called “jumping genes” – copy and paste themselves into different parts of our genomes. The research aims to understand how “jumping genes” have led to human variation and disease.

    The Science, Action! contest enables students to present their NSERC-funded science research to a wide audience.

    “There is so much great research that goes unnoticed on campuses, and we wanted to bring these stories to Canadians in a way that is fun and accessible,” says Christian Riel, NSERC’s Director of Communications. “Science, Action! challenges students to find new ways of explaining complex research so that anyone from kids to grandparents can understand.”

    Mueller says he had to “unwrap several layers” of the first draft of his script before coming up with the final wording for his video.

    “Through the process, I feel like we built up a lot of communication skills,” he says. “I’m noticing a trend: some of the best scientists I know are also the best communicators I know.”

    Students entering the contest faced some big challenges. In mid-February, NSERC posted 75 video entries from students across Canada; seven of these videos were from Brock. The 25 videos with the most views by March 2 would then make it to the next round. Five Brock videos made it into the Top 25. From there, a panel of judges selected the Top 15.

    “These videos give a great vision of what our research is all about,” says Dahi. “Our family and friends were asking questions, wanting to know more. It’s a great opportunity for us to tell people what we’re doing on a daily basis.”

    “It’s a really good way to figure out how to boil down our research, which we usually think of as being so complicated,” says Nanayakkara.

    NSERC announced the 2018 contest results on Thursday, April 26. All 15 finalists receive cash prizes worth up to $3,500.

    For more information or for assistance arranging interviews:

    * Dan Dakin, Media Relations Officer, Brock University ddakin@brocku.ca, 905-688-5550 x5353 or 905-347-1970

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    Categories: Media releases