Close X
Friday, October 4, 2024
ADVT 
National

Researchers Examine Toll Of War On Newly Arrived Syrian Refugee Children

The Canadian Press, 10 Aug, 2016 01:17 PM
    TORONTO — Beginning a new school year can be an anxious time for some children. For those shattered by early psychological trauma, it can be especially fraught with emotion.
     
    A study underway at Western University is examining how the war-torn experiences of newly arrived young Syrian refugees might affect their ability to cope in the classroom, and researcher Mazen El-Baba hopes the findings will go a long way towards improving everything from teachers' lesson plans to community programs to government policy.
     
    He says many new arrivals have not been to school in years and will almost definitely struggle in September.
     
    "My fears are of the teacher not being able to understand where to begin," El-Baba says of what sparked the study, still in its data-gathering phase.
     
    "It's different than teaching another kid the basics because (here) you're dealing with more mature children who are well aware that their level is way behind their actual class. There's a lot of difficulties. I really, really hope the school boards are prepared for it."
     
    He points to a nine-year-old he knows who will enter Grade 5 despite not knowing what plus and minus are, and a 16-year-old who will enter Grade 10 despite only having a Grade 5 education. Then there's bullying, which he calls "a huge, huge problem" given the experiences of some Syrian kids who ventured into Canadian classrooms this past spring.
     
    "All the kids we know that went to school, all the parents were telling us: 'We need help in September because our kids are being beaten up and spit at at school.' I know a six-year-old who was being hit by various other (kids) in his class."
     
     
     
    The study involves 81 children and a battery of tests conducted in English and Arabic. They include tests to assess numerical fluency and cognition, language proficiency, impulsivity, and how subjects respond to positive, negative or neutral feedback.
     
    It's part of a larger research project that also studied kids with typical upbringings in the London, Ont., area, says supervisor J. Bruce Morton, an associate psychology professor and principal investigator at the university's Brain and Mind Institute.
     
    Morton notes the focus of the study isn't unique, pointing to a large study from Harvard University that analysed the psychological profile of children from Romanian orphanages.
     
    "People are coming at this with somewhat more specific hypotheses and better measures perhaps for identifying the impact of adversity on the developing mind," Morton says of differences in this study.
     
    "Looking for instance at the relationship between trauma and attention control, so how long can children remain focused on the task before they're kind of ready to move on and do something different? Or how long can they sit still?
     
    "These kinds of questions of course are going to be really important as we begin to imagine these children functioning in a regular classroom."
     
    But they're not just looking at where things can go wrong. Morton says he hopes the study can shed light on what can make a child succeed, despite the odds.
     
    "There are going to be other kids who are going to be amazingly resilient and are going to flourish and adapt relatively well to their new social and cultural environment. And those kids I think are also equally valuable to study."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Fort McMurray Pit Bull Stuck In Manitoba, Ban Prevents Travel Through Ontario

    Fort McMurray Pit Bull Stuck In Manitoba, Ban Prevents Travel Through Ontario
    Three weeks after fleeing the flames with her family in Fort McMurray, Lucy the pit bull is trying to get around a legal roadblock.

    Fort McMurray Pit Bull Stuck In Manitoba, Ban Prevents Travel Through Ontario

    Newfoundland Panel Rejects Appeal In Moose-Vehicle Collisions Class-Action

    Newfoundland Panel Rejects Appeal In Moose-Vehicle Collisions Class-Action
    Ches Crosbie argued before a panel of three appeal court judges in January 2015 that a trial judge was wrong to dismiss the lawsuit in September 2014.

    Newfoundland Panel Rejects Appeal In Moose-Vehicle Collisions Class-Action

    Kathleen Wynne, Ontario, Ridiculed By Opposition Wildrose In Alberta Legislature

    Kathleen Wynne, Ontario, Ridiculed By Opposition Wildrose In Alberta Legislature
    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne came to Alberta to talk environment but instead found herself publicly ridiculed on the floor of the legislature as the leader of a failed, debt-ridden enterprise.

    Kathleen Wynne, Ontario, Ridiculed By Opposition Wildrose In Alberta Legislature

    Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall Not Interested In Becoming Federal Tory Leader

    A group called Brad Wall For Prime Minister is circulating an open letter to Tories meeting in Vancouver for the party's annual convention

    Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall Not Interested In Becoming Federal Tory Leader

    Liberal MP Arnold Chan Struggles To Slow Down For Cancer Treatments

    "Oh, damn," Chan said he thought to himself that night in February as he realized the cancer had resurfaced.

    Liberal MP Arnold Chan Struggles To Slow Down For Cancer Treatments

    Newfoundland And Labrador Rejects $32,000 Judges' Pay Hike Amid Fiscal Crisis

    Newfoundland And Labrador Rejects $32,000 Judges' Pay Hike Amid Fiscal Crisis
    An independent tribunal recommended a 14 per cent salary increase for provincial court judges over four years ending this fiscal year.

    Newfoundland And Labrador Rejects $32,000 Judges' Pay Hike Amid Fiscal Crisis