Bishop’s grad student honoured for trauma awareness work
By William Crooks
Local Journalism Initiative
Mélanie Letendre Jauniaux, a psychology master’s student at Bishop’s University, has received national recognition for her community-based research and powerful communication skills. Jauniaux was awarded the Engagement Prize at this year’s Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) Storytellers Challenge—an honour voted on by her fellow finalists.
“The SSHRC Storytellers Contest is a federally funded competition where you have to tell the story of your research and why it matters—in three minutes—to a multidisciplinary or lay audience,” Jauniaux explained in a June 16 conversation. “It’s a great way to practice scientific communication.”
Jauniaux’s work centres around trauma-informed education. A former youth protection worker, she returned to school shortly before the pandemic, completing a BA in psychology and a certificate in knowledge mobilization before moving on to her current master’s research.
Her passion for the topic is deeply personal. “I’m a trauma survivor,” she shared. “Learning the science of trauma helped me realize I wasn’t alone.”
Trauma, she said, is now broadly defined as an event that overwhelms a person’s capacity to cope and can change the brain and body. But healing is possible. “We can rewire, we can reconnect, and we can heal,” she said.
Her master’s project involves the creation and evaluation of a half-day trauma-awareness training program delivered in partnership with local organizations. “It provides participants with basic knowledge about the science of trauma, how to become more trauma-informed, and how to apply this understanding in real-world contexts,” she explained. “Participants say it’s helped them understand their own experiences and those of people around them, and some have even changed their workplace practices.”