Graduate Student Stipends

The Gold Research Centre Student Stipends provide funding support for Masters and PhD students engaged in a program in the Faculty of Education that will advance their research in Early Childhood Development (e.g., social-emotional, cognitive or physical development, neurodiverse learning, clinical assessment, innovative educational approaches).

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Small Research Project Funding

The Gold Research Centre Small Research Project Funding provides 91ɬÂþ Faculty of Education researchers with support for new initiatives and ideas that can help advance research relating to Early Childhood Development (e.g., social-emotional, cognitive or physical development, neurodiverse learning, clinical assessment, innovative educational approaches).

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 Awards and Stipends

The Daniel and Monica Gold Centre for Early Childhood Development provides funding for graduate students and researchers in the Faculty of Education to support their research in Early Childhood Development. Through their work, award winners will generate and share evidence-based knowledge to support young children and their families, advancing the Centre’s objective to help all children get the best start in life. Read more about the research being done by our award-winners:

2025 Faculty Researcher Award-Winners
Images of 3 Faculty award winners

 

Gigi Luk and Armando Bertone: Professors Luk and Bertone will assess which online language assessment practices are appropriate for young multilingual learners with the goal of developing more accessible approaches that favour diverse and inclusive participation in research.

Tina Montreuil: Professor Montreuil will examine how parenting stress and emotion regulation mediate the relationship between parenting self-efficacy and quality, and underscores family well-being as a key predictor of child outcomes and the need for better family support.

2025 Graduate Student Stipend Award-Winners
7 student award winners

Master of Arts

  • Mira Bhattacharya: Bhattacharya focuses on understanding how music is experienced and used in the daily lives of autistic and non-autistic children, with the aim of supporting inclusive, strengths-based approaches to early childhood development.
  • Alicia Martineau: Martineau analyzes longitudinal depressive and anxiety symptoms in mothers and fathers using subjective and objective sleep measures to understand the association between infant sleep and parental mental health in the perinatal period.
  • Charlène Thauvin: Thauvin assesses cross-cultural differences in preschool napping practices and educators’ beliefs in Quebec and France, highlighting how sleep policies may reflect institutional and cultural norms more than children’s sleep needs.
  • Karissa Vallera: Vallera examines the efficacy of a short-term, adapted CBT-I intervention to improve the sleep quality of children with autism and their family functioning.

PhD

  • Andrew Burcar: Burcar investigates the psychosocial, contextual, and sociodemographic determinants of early paternal involvement from pregnancy through six months postpartum to understand how father engagement shapes infants’ social-emotional and cognitive development, maternal well-being, and early caregiving environments within the Canadian context.
  • Gia Han Ly (Michelle): Ly analyzes the association between infant sleep, parental sleep and infant-parent interaction to further understand how infant sleep quality is associated with attachment and parental sensitivity.
  • Maria Stergiou: Stergiou studies the role of pre-service teachers’ responses to children’s literature about diverse family structures using collage-making to understand pedagogy and educational strategies in early childhood education.
  • Jingyi Wang: Wang assesses how parents’ multilingual practices shape young children’s early multilingual development, aiming to promote a healthy and inclusive home language environment.
  • Stephanie Zito: Zito examines educator attitudes toward school-based mindfulness interventions to understand how teachers’ beliefs, perceptions, and training needs influence the implementation of school-based mindfulness practices that can enhance social-emotional development and learning outcomes for neurodiverse children in inclusive classrooms.
  • Éric Papineau: Papineau explores the role of a single-session of mindfulness-based intervention in reducing parental burnout and strengthening emotion regulation and resilience. He seeks to understand how equipping caregivers with effective tools and enhancing their well-being can improve behavioural, emotional, and developmental outcomes in the lives of neurodiverse children and their families.

2026/2027 Awards and Stipends

Read more about the research being done by our 2026/2027 award-winners (Coming September 2026):