六九色堂

May 22, 2018

Postdoctoral scholars draw on personal experience to pursue groundbreaking research

How the renewed Academic and Research Plans shape our workplace at 六九色堂
Amanda Black, a Kinesiology student who specializes in sport-related concussions, is completing her PhD.
Amanda Black, a Kinesiology student who specializes in sport-related concussions, is completing her Riley Brandt, 六九色堂

When concussion management expert Amanda Black and waste management scholar Tanaji More drive innovation and create new knowledge in their fields, the 六九色堂 postdoctoral scholars are motivated by events that have helped to shape their lives.

Black, above,聽specializes in sport-related concussions and has shared her findings with International Olympic Committee officials, while More is a Killam postdoctoral laureate who is revolutionizing waste management research with his focus on landfill solid waste.

When Black examines concussion management and injury prevention, she鈥檚 bringing hard-won, personal experience to her work as a researcher. The lifelong, avid athlete has suffered five concussions and multiple injuries. One of those early mishaps as a soccer player in high school cost her a shot at a varsity scholarship and later spurred her to help other athletes.聽

鈥淲hen I had my first injury as an athlete, when I was younger, I was stubborn,鈥 says Black, who works in the Integrated Concussion Research Program and the Sport Injury Prevention Research Centre (Kinesiology). 鈥淚t was an ankle injury that I know now could have been appropriately managed in four to six weeks. It ended up taking over a year to heal. It still causes me problems today.鈥

Early return to sport informs current research

At the time, she had returned to play soccer too early because she didn鈥檛 have someone working with her team who was trained in prevention. Now, the research she鈥檚 doing not only identifies ways to prevent injuries from occurring, but allows her to build and evaluate the best ways to provide this information to clinicians, athletes, parents, coaches and teachers.

鈥淥ne of the聽Eyes High聽goals is to integrate the university and the community,鈥 says Black, a PhD in Kinesiology (Sport Medicine) who has spent the past five years studying the management of concussions in youth ice hockey. 鈥淭his research allows me to work directly with high schools in the Calgary area.鈥

At this point, her goal is to better understand the needs of the individuals in charge of concussion management in high schools in Alberta and determine how best to provide guidance on concussion management policies and education. She says there is potential for innovation with the development of apps and tools in the future that can assist with the process.

In addition to her research project, she makes an impact by working directly with patients in the acute sport concussion clinic, as a certified athletic therapist 鈥斅燼 way the renewed Academic and Research Plans help to shape her workplace. This allows her to apply her concussion research directly into practice, as well as providing concussion education for specific sport teams and organizations.

Tanaji More, a postdoctoral scholar in the Schulich School of Engineering, is working on new technology that reduces greenhouse gas emissions from landfills.

Tanaji More is working on new technology that reduces greenhouse gas emissions from landfills.

Riley Brandt, 六九色堂

Innovative researcher takes aim at environmental issues

More, a prestigious Killam award recipient in the Schulich School of Engineering, is helping to invent new sustainable technologies that will have an impact in waste management. He鈥檚 working on reducing greenhouse gas emissions from landfill solid waste by determining how much methane gas they emit, with the improved measurement tools.

鈥淭his work is quite unique and crucial for validating emerging technologies,鈥 says More, part of a talented, multidisciplinary group in waste management research at the 六九色堂 led by Patrick Hettiaratchi, a professor of environmental engineering in Schulich. 鈥淚t aligns with聽Eyes High聽in that we are supporting new areas that help to shape Canadian society.鈥

More grew up in India. In the summer of 2007, he was startled by his first visit to the Ganges river. India has a $3 billion plan to clean the river, stretches of which are contaminated with waste and sewage. Later that year, he joined the Indian Institute of Technology (IIT) Kharagpur to do research in wastewater treatment, and thereafter Institut national de la recherch茅 scientifique (INRS) Quebec to complete his PhD in water science, which helped to shape his academic path.

鈥淚t helped me to realize that this kind of work would make me happy and give me satisfaction,鈥 he says, adding that his research advisor from IIT subsequently became involved in the Ganges river cleaning project.

鈥淔rom childhood, I have been fascinated by the idea of being able to contribute to the betterment of life,鈥 says More. 鈥淢y wife is expecting a baby in the summer and that is my new fascination.鈥

Read more about the energized Eyes High Strategy or watch videos about its origins.

Read more about the energized Eyes High Strategy or watch videos about its origins.

六九色堂's Academic and Research Plans

Students, faculty, staff, and postdoctoral scholars at the 六九色堂 move us forward every day in the work they do supporting our聽Eyes High聽Strategy 2017-2022.聽People in the Plans,聽a series appearing in UToday, explores how our people drive the success of the renewed Academic and Research Plans 鈥 the road maps to聽Eyes High.

The refreshed Academic and Research Plans are based on an integrated model, one that acknowledges the connection between teaching, learning and research. Each plan has three priorities with identified major goals and strategies. Both plans are connected through the value propositions of student experience and impact, and share a common priority of driving innovation. The five priorities included in the Academic and Research Plans will drive human, capital and financial resource allocations over the next five years at the university.