Clinical Workshop
April 4, 2024, 9:00 am to 4:00 pm
Room TBA
Ìý
Using Narratives to Enhance Speech, Language and Communication in Students with Speech, Language and Communication Needs (SLCN): the magic of storytelling.
Clinical Workshop
April 4, 2024, 9:00 am to 4:00 pm
Room TBA
Ìý
Using Narratives to Enhance Speech, Language and Communication in Students with Speech, Language and Communication Needs (SLCN): the magic of storytelling.
McGill’s School of Communication Sciences and Disorders
is proud to be hosting a research talk on enhancing the language of adolescents
with DLD and a workshop on using narratives in clinical assessment and
intervention.
These events are funded by the Scaringi Lecture Series grant. This year the events are also co-sponsored by the
FRQSC group on Cognitive plasticity and language acquisition.
McGill’s School of Communication Sciences and Disorders
is proud to announce:
The 2024 Dr. Donald G. Doehring Memorial Lecture
March 11, 4:30 to 6 pm
Leacock 232
855 Sherbrooke St. W.
Dr. Sheila Blumstein
Brown University
La version française suit
Drs. Marina Klein and Sapha Barkati received the 2023 FMSQ prize for their research publication in The New England Journal of Medicine titled: "". This award recognizes doctors who significantly contribute to advancing medical research in Quebec through the publication of a research article.
Annual list includes 16 researchers among the world’s most cited, Canada retains 6th place overall in global ranking
McGill’s Body Donor Program plays crucial role in health sciences education
Overall, donors have an impact on the education of more than a thousand students every year.
McGill Cares was launched by the Dementia Education Program during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic, on May 13, 2020, while many of us were isolating at home. Claire Webster, Founder of the Program, had the idea to record short interviews with different experts on topics of interest to care partners of people living with neurocognitive disorders to help educate and support them during this difficult time.Ìý
On Saturday, October 14, Healthy Brains, Healthy Lives (HBHL)Ìýpresented the Amazing Brain Science Talks, organized in collaboration with . The event, held at McGill's Tanna Schulich Hall, aimed to make brain science accessible to everyone, bringing together researchers and speakers with lived experience in front of the general public for an afternoon of discussions about small actions to take that keep your brain healthy and about the incredible powers of the human brain.Ìý
For Children (3+) and Adults
Wednesday November 8th & Thursday November 9th, 2023
9:00am - 4:00pm
Location: School of Communication Sciences and Disorders (SCSD)
2001 McGill College Avenue, 8th Floor, Montreal
Ìý
Hearing information will be provided and an audiologist will be on site to answer questions
What is the Steinberg Centre for Simulation and Interactive Learning (SCSIL)?
We are an interprofessional centre of excellence that uses the latest medical simulation technology to enhance the skills of health care professionals. Fully integrated into McGill's medical and health sciences programs, we provide the next generation of doctors, nurses, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, speech language pathologists and more with hands-on training in difficult and potentially dangerous procedures without risk to patients.
Studying the mutations in kidney cancer after surgery could help to better predict the risk of the disease coming back, according to the latest results of a decade-long international .
The research, undertaken by a team of 44 researchers at 23 institutions across Europe and Canada, including Ï㽶ÊÓƵ, is the largest to link the genetic changes that occur in kidney cancer to patient outcomes.
Two seminal studies from Ï㽶ÊÓƵ, investigating immune landscapes of lung and brain tumours, were published today in Nature. This work was led by Logan Walsh, Daniela Quail and Peter Siegel, researchers at the Rosalind and Morris Goodman Cancer Institute and Philippe Joubert from Université Laval. The studies used innovative highly multiplexed imaging to create sophisticated immune atlases of lung and brain tumours and demonstrate how big data and artificial intelligence are the future of cancer research and clinical care.