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Home / News & opinion / News / September / 27
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      • Finger tracing enhances learning: evidence for 100-year-old practice
      • Brain and Mind Centre mental health modelling recognised globally
      • Researchers develop ‘safe’ quarantine monitoring system

27

Articles

27 September 2021

Researchers develop 'safe' quarantine monitoring system

A School of Computer Science researcher is collaborating with the NSW Smart Sensing Network (NSSN) and the University of Technology to deliver a quarantine monitoring system that could be used by arrivals once state and national borders reopen.
27 September 2021

Finger tracing enhances learning: evidence for 100-year-old practice

A practice used by education pioneer Montessori in the early 1900s has received further validation, with studies showing that finger tracing makes learning easier and more motivating. Imagining an object after tracing it can generate even faster learning, for children and adults alike.
27 September 2021

Brain and Mind Centre mental health modelling recognised globally

Advanced mental health modelling by the Brain and Mind Centre is making global impact, recognised as a top innovation by the World Economic Forum announced through Scientific American, and leading to an essay in Nature today.