Showing posts with label ECIR member. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ECIR member. Show all posts

Friday, 1 March 2024

Decentring the Human in Qualitative Research Methodologies Seminar Series

Hosted by the Australian Association for Research in Education (AARE) Qualitative Research Methodologies Special Interest Group Convenors:

  • Dr Sheena Elwick, Charles Sturt University, Albury/Wodonga, Australia
  • Dr Keith Heggart, University of Technology, Sydney, Australia

This free seminar series consists of six 1-hour online seminars via Zoom on the topic of decentring the human in qualitative research methodologies. Each seminar features a presentation by a guest speaker who has experience with decentring the human in the context of qualitative research methodologies in educational research. Each seminar will also be followed by a debriefing session.

The first seminar will be presented by Associate Professor Luke Bennett, Department of the Natural & Built Environment Sheffield Hallam University, UK on Thursday 21st March 2024 at 7.30pm – 8.30pm AEDT.

You will find detailed information about the series here including information about presenters, dates, times and registration details:  https://www.aare.edu.au/sigs/qualitative-research-methodologies/decentring-the-human-in-qualitative-research-methodologies-seminar-series/ (scroll down the page for details and the registration link for each seminar). More seminars are being added as dates and times are confirmed, and they will include national and international presenters. 

You do not need to be a member of AARE to register for any of the seminars and we are particularly keen to involve Early Career Researchers and Higher Degree Research students. 


Thursday, 22 February 2024

Congratulations Kate Margetson - PhD submission

Congratulations to Kate Margetson who submitted her PhD today. 

Her PhD is titled: "Moving Beyond Monolingual Practices with Multilingual Children: Learning from Vietnamese-English–Speaking Children, Families, and Professionals". Professor Sharynne McLeod and Associate Professor Sarah Verdon supervised Kate.

Congratulations Kate!

Here is Kate's PhD abstract:

Multilingual children’s speech assessment and differential diagnosis of speech sound disorders can be challenging for speech-language pathologists (SLPs), especially if they do not speak the same language as the children they are working with. While best practice recommendations include assessing children in all the languages that they speak, in many English-dominant contexts SLPs often rely on English assessments for diagnostic decision-making. There are few guidelines for how SLPs can assess, transcribe, and analyse speech in children’s home languages. This doctoral research aimed to explore assessment, transcription, speech analysis, and diagnosis of speech sound disorders in multilingual children involving direct speech assessment of children’s home languages. Vietnamese-English–speaking children and their families were the focus of this research.

The thesis contained four parts, which included five publications. Part One, Monolingual Speech-Language Pathologists in Multilingual Contexts (Chapter 1), included an orientation to the thesis, situated the researcher, presented a literature review, and outlined methodology. Linguistic multicompetence (Cook, 2016) and the emergence approach (Davis & Bedore, 2013) were presented as the theoretical frameworks underpinning the research.

Part Two, Vietnamese-English–speaking Children’s Speech described similarities and differences between Vietnamese and English phonology, Vietnamese-English–speaking children’s speech acquisition, and current resources available to SLPs for assessment and intervention with Vietnamese-English–speaking children (Chapter 2). The interaction between Vietnamese and English phonology was explored in a cross-sectional study (n = 149) of Vietnamese-English–speaking children’s and adult family members’ speech in Vietnamese and English (Chapter 3) and found that direction of cross-linguistic transfer in children’s speech was significantly associated with children’s age and language proficiency. 

Part Three, Diagnosis of Speech Sound Disorders in Vietnamese-English–speaking Children presented in-depth case studies of Vietnamese-English–speaking children’s speech. Case studies of four children considered the impact of assessing both languages on differential diagnosis (Chapter 4). All four children appeared to have speech sound disorder based on English assessment only, but analysis of children’s speech in both languages revealed that only two children had a speech sound disorder. A longitudinal case study explored four influences on a Vietnamese-English–speaking child’s speech over time (Chapter 5) and found that most speech mismatches could be explained by development, dialect, cross-linguistic transfer, and ambient phonology, and that cross-linguistic transfer reduced over time.

Part Four, Moving Beyond Monolingual Speech-Language Pathology Practices with Multilingual Children presented an evidence-based research protocol, the VietSpeech Multilingual Transcription Protocol, for assessing and transcribing multilingual children’s and adults’ speech, that ensured consistent and reliable transcription (Chapter 6). A clinical protocol, the Speech Assessment of Children’s Home Languages, was proposed, for SLPs to assess, transcribe, and analyse multilingual children’s speech, to account for the idiolects of children, their families, and their SLPs (Chapter 7). The Speech Assessment of Children’s Home Languages will enable SLPs to collaborate with family members and interpreters to assess speech in children’s home languages, providing opportunities to consider children’s entire phonological repertoires during diagnostic decision-making. Finally, conclusions, contributions of the doctoral research, limitations, and future directions were presented (Chapter 8).

This doctoral research sought to bridge a gap between research and practice in multilingual children’s speech assessment by demonstrating the importance of speech assessment of home languages, describing ways of analysing multilingual children’s speech to identify four potential mismatches (development, dialect, cross-linguistic transfer, ambient phonology), and outlining how SLPs move beyond monolingual practices in the way they assess, transcribe, and analyse multilingual children’s speech using the VietSpeech Multilingual Transcription Protocol and the Speech Assessment of Children’s Home Languages.

Tuesday, 9 January 2024

Congratulations MRFF grant recipient, Professor Julian Grant

Congratulations ECIR member Professor Julian Grant on being part of a partnership led by the Sax Institute awarded a Medical Research Future Fund (MRFF) Indigenous Health Research grant for a project entitled "Decolonising lactation care to support the initiation and maintenance of breastfeeding among First Nations women". The project aims to increase breast feeding by providing culturally appropriate lactation care. Further details https://www.saxinstitute.org.au/news/innovative-project-provides-breastfeeding-support-to-first-nations-women/ 

Tuesday, 5 December 2023

Academic promotions congratulations

 Well done to our 2023 ECIR academic promotees:

  • Level B, Belinda Downey - Education
  • Level D, Libbey Murray - Education.
Congratulations on your promotion.

Tuesday, 7 November 2023

Congratulations Belinda Downey - CSU HDR prize

Congratulations Belinda who was voted Best Presentation in the School of Education Panel, by the HDR Colloquium Fellows ($200 prize!) https://www.thestreamingguys.com.au/production/hdr-2023/



Thursday, 26 October 2023

WHO Regional Committee 74th session

Professor Sharynne McLeod represented the International Association of Communication Sciences and Disorders (IALP) at the seventy-fourth session of the World Health Organization Regional Committee for the Western Pacific (#RCM74), 16 to 20 October 2023 in Manila, Philippines https://www.who.int/westernpacific/about/governance/regional-committee/session-74. The Regional Committee for the Western Pacific represents 1.9 billon people across 37 countries and areas. The region is extremely diverse including China (1.4 billon population) and Niue (< 2000 population). This year marks the 75th anniversary of the World Health Organization. The agenda of RCM74 included: Investing in health and universal health coverage; health security; health innovation; communication for health; and the health workforce. Prof McLeod submitted two interventions on behalf of IALP and had many rich discussions, particularly about the Regional Action Framework Communication for Health (C4H).






Tuesday, 24 October 2023

Congratulations Marie Ireland

Congratulations to Marie Ireland who has had an exciting week. First she learned the excellent result of her PhD by Prior Publication. Second, she learned that the following manuscript based on a chapter in her PhD has been accepted for publication: 

Ireland, M., McLeod, S, & Verdon, S. (2023, in press). Eligibility determinations for speech and language services in United States public schools: Experiences and tensions. Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in Schools. 

Here is the abstract: 

Purpose: To examine school speech-language pathologists’ (SLPs) experiences regarding students’ eligibility for services in public schools within the United States. 

Method: Fifteen school SLPs participated in online focus groups to examine the complex nature of SLPs’ participation within decision-making teams and describe practice experiences in U.S. schools. SLPs worked in 1-10+ schools serving students from pre-K through 12th grade. Data were analyzed using Cultural Historical Activity Theory (CHAT) (Engeström, 2015). 

Results: School SLPs’ practice is impacted by rules, community, and division of labor in schools. Participants discussed: culture of the work setting; interaction between team members; desire to assist families and children; knowledge of regulations; evaluation practices; and the impact of poverty, cultural and linguistic differences. Nine major tensions were identified: SLPs’ concerns regarding outcomes of eligibility decision-making; documentation of educational impact; need for greater SLP empowerment and advocacy; complexities of students learning English as an additional language; overuse of the diagnosis of speech-language impairment (SLI) for students who do not qualify; administrators’ adherence to rules; parents’ involvement in decision making; disagreement between team members; and concerns about evaluation data for decision making. 

Conclusion: Within the schools, the CHAT framework was useful to identify tensions and opportunities for change at the individual and institutional level impacting team decision-making for eligibility, SLPs provision of services, and student outcomes. Acknowledgment of tensions and opportunities for change regarding students’ eligibility for services may guide public policy, pre-service training, and individual, local and national advocacy.

Congratulations Dr Belinda Downey

While at the Early Childhood Interdisciplinary Research Group Retreat, Belinda Downey learned the news of her successful PhD outcome. She has been approved for graduation - after receiving outstanding examiners' reports. Congratulations Belinda.

Belinda Downey's PhD is now available online. It is titled: Staying in Early Childhood: Struggle, Hope and Connection. Here is the link: https://researchoutput.csu.edu.au/en/publications/staying-in-early-childhood-struggle-hope-and-connection 


Belinda with her supervisors A/Prof Will Letts,
Dr Leanne Gibbs and Prof Sharynne McLeod


ECIR Research Retreat in Bathurst and online (9-11 October, 2023)

Our ECIR research retreat was a wonderful time of building bonds, collaborative conversations and robust interdisciplinary discussions. Members travelled to Bathurst + joined online. What a wonderful time together celebrating our achievements, learning together, planning our grant writing and holding preliminary discussions about ECV2024. Thank you to Holly McAlister and Belinda Freizer for making us think about how to listen to children, to the Research Office (Dr Emmaline Lear, Dr Lisa Limbrick, Dr Dale Curran) for your excellent workshops and FOAE Admin team for joining us to begin planning ECV2024.




















Thursday, 12 October 2023

Congratulations Van Tran, Vietnamese Ambassador

On 8 September, which is the Vietnamese Language Day (for Vietnamese overseas), ECIR member Van Tran attended the conference on Teaching Vietnamese Overseas. In the evening, Vietnam Television and the State Committee of Overseas Vietnamese organised a Gala to celebrate Vietnamese as the Mother Tongue, which was broadcast live on Vietnam Television (VTV2, VTV4) from 8-9.30pm. At this event, they awarded 5 people with the Title/award “Ambassador of Vietnamese” (Van was one of them) for their contribution to maintaining Vietnamese overseas. Van was interviewed by newspapers and media and talked about the CSU VietSpeech project related to home language maintenance. 

Further details:

https://tuoitre.vn/lan-dau-tien-ton-vinh-su-gia-tieng-viet-o-nuoc-ngoai-20230908115232771.htm?fbclid=IwAR3Cr0ZamWKCvxMbm3NEITv6bGOS2NuxRJv7mAf2pX4snyG8dm5UQFxUlD0

https://baoquocte.vn/hanh-trinh-cua-su-gia-tieng-viet-tai-australia-241200.html&amp=1?fbclid=IwAR1az0CwlnYzvb6y4C8FHBzn3-dnON7-IfHNOmBdyaFqeKgcd38YhrNeCtw

https://phapluat.tuoitrethudo.com.vn/kieu-bao-no-luc-duy-tri-va-lan-toa-tieng-viet-o-nuoc-ngoai-84446.html?gidzl=ncm8QnFiLXl2Smne7FPI6y9o0MeBzLWVs7O6FblpN1cC80LhMQXOIeSj2ZrL_GTEq2a8RsBdiMj54kbQ70

https://phapluat.tuoitrethudo.com.vn/no-luc-gin-giu-va-phat-huy-ban-sac-van-hoa-thong-qua-day-va-hoc-tieng-viet-84447.html

https://thoidai.com.vn/4-giai-phap-gin-giu-phat-trien-tieng-viet-trong-cong-dong-nvnonn-190884.html?gidzl=4tLj3YFnKGmNQcaDBEjL31TgQWuxwL493MvjMcllLGzPE6uFQRHHN58rOLbbuGvO1J5Z2s82jGat8lHT2m

https://nld.com.vn/chinh-tri/chon-5-su-gia-tieng-viet-o-nuoc-ngoai-20230909111805049.htm?fbclid=IwAR3l02_ZCQ_b2sWJGSJqyStREFnNgCQ69hV4qFkvFATa83gKpAhamns1Jhw

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=I00qaa4_dtY

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BfXaH5n_4dc&ab_channel=VNEWS-TRUY%E1%BB%80NH%C3%8CNHTH%C3%94NGT%E1%BA%A4N

https://fb.watch/n0PRtdi737/


 

Friday, 22 September 2023

Presentation to the Western NSW Health Research Network

Congratulations to Cathie Matthews who presented her Masters' research to the Western NSW Health Research Network (WNRN) Symposium in Dubbo Monday 11 and Tuesday 12 September 2023 (https://whrnnetwork.wordpress.com/

The title of her presentation was "Advancing rural children’s communication, partnering with parents, early educators and child and family health nurses". 

Cathie Matthews is undertaking her Masters research at CSU supervised by Julian Grant, Sharynne McLeod, Libbey Murray. She is also undertaking a Health Education and Training Institute (HETI) Grant supervised by Kerith Duncanson (HETI) and  Georgina Luscombe from The University of Sydney.




Tuesday, 19 September 2023

Congratulations Associate Professor Azizur Rahman – Highly Commended, Acceleration Fellowship

 


Congratulations ECIR member Associate Professor Azizur Rahman who was awarded the Highly Commended Fellowship Prize, 2023-24 Acceleration Fellowships in artificial intelligence and cybersecurity research, Charles Sturt University. With his project on ‘Developing health modelling tools with big data from Southeast Asia’, Professor Rahman stands at the intersection of data science and real-world application   https://news.csu.edu.au/latest-news/artificial-intelligence-acceleration-fellows-harness-the-power-of-interdisciplinary-research


Tuesday, 22 August 2023

32nd World Congress of the International Association of Communication Sciences and Disorders (IALP)

Congratulations ECIR members presenting at the 32nd World Congress of the International Association of Communication Sciences and Disorders (IALP) in Auckland, New Zealand: https://ialpauckland2023.org/

There are 950 delegates from 48 countries in attendance. Sharynne McLeod is the Chair of the Child Speech Committee and on the Executive Board.

ECIR member presentations:

Children’s speech development across the world: Sharynne McLeod & Helen Blake (co-ordinators) 

Speech-language pathology and its contribution to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals: Sharynne McLeod & Julie Marshall

Listening to children’s voices in the Pacific: Holly McAlister, Suzanne C. Hopf, Sharynne McLeod

Cross-linguistic transfer in multilingual children’s speech: Kate Margetson, Sharynne McLeod, Sarah Verdon 

Dental extractions and children’s speech: Caitlin Hurley, Robert, Sharynne McLeod

Holly McAlister's presentation



Sharynne McLeod

Tuesday, 15 August 2023

Communication is a human right – but not everyone can communicate effectively

Sharynne McLeod has shared thoughts after her CSU Provocations Lecture: "Children should be seen AND heard: the importance of communication so children can thrive" Public Lecture on 20th April 2023.  Read them here https://provocationsqa.csu.edu.au/communication-is-a-human-right-but-not-everyone-can-communicate-effectively/


Friday, 28 July 2023

Congratulations Marie on your PhD submission

Congratulations to Marie Ireland who recently submitted her PhD from Iceland. She undertook her PhD by Prior Publication. Marie's thesis title was "Evaluation and Eligibility of Students with Communication Disorders in Public Schools in the United States" and consisted of 13 chapters (10 publications + 3 exegesis chapters). 

Here is the abstract: 

Communication is an essential human right that, beginning early in a child’s life, provides the foundation for interaction with others. Communication is the underpinning for success in school and untreated communication disorders may impact children’s futures. In the United States, students with disabilities in public schools receive free speech and language evaluations and, if needed, services from speech-language pathologists (SLPs). In U.S. public schools this process is regulated by the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and services are only available to students who meet specific eligibility criteria. An educational disability must result in an educational impact and is decided by a team that includes SLPs. Private speech-language pathology services are also available using a fee for service model decided by individual service providers. As parents and some educators may desire free services for students under IDEA, there is pressure to identify students as disabled who do not meet eligibility criteria. Misidentification due to cultural or linguistic differences also occurs. There are potential negative consequences to inappropriate disability identification such as: segregation from typically developing peers, violating the child’s rights with decreased expectations or limited educational opportunities, increased caseloads for SLPs resulting in recruitment and retention issues, and violation of state and federal regulations. While service options exist outside of IDEA, inconsistency in evaluation practices and eligibility decision-making has been documented and creates tensions for families, educators, and SLPs.

This thesis presents work for a PhD by Prior Publication to explore and describe evaluation and eligibility of students with communication disorders in U.S. public schools using quantitative and qualitative research and publications (presented as chapters) over the span of a career drawn together through an exegesis. Part 1 includes 7 chapters and provides an introduction and literature review that examines the SLPs’ practice patterns and documents the unique requirements for public-school practice in the United States. Chapter 2 reviews public policy and Chapter 3 discusses educational requirements and provides the context of public policy in the United States. A review of evaluation and eligibility requirements under IDEA and research on evaluation practices focusing on students from diverse backgrounds, test accuracy, and state differences are included in Chapter 4. Clarification regarding regulations, guidance and information to support understanding of guidelines and severity rating tools used by states as they implement IDEA is presented in Chapter 5. Options for services to support students with language differences, not disorders, outside of IDEA are detailed in Chapter 6. Chapter 7 integrates research and policy in the United States and addresses the implementation of research on children with speech sound disorders in the context of IDEA.

Part 2 includes six chapters and addresses the complex activity system involving team decision-making regarding evaluation and eligibility for speech-language pathology services in U.S. schools. Chapter 8 presents the theoretical framework that was used as the unifying approach to this thesis and for the study reported in Chapter 9. The chosen theoretical framework, Cultural-Historical Activity Theory (CHAT) by Engström (1987, 2015), was used to explain the complex activity system of speech-language pathology services in U.S. schools. Chapter 9 investigates the team decision-making activity system for determining student eligibility for speech or language services in U.S. schools and documents nine major tensions related to the team decision-making activity system. Chapters 10, 11, and 12 document SLPs’ use of evidence-based practices and language sample analysis techniques. Variations in evaluation and eligibility decision-making often are attributed to the SLP, rather than the team decision-making system. The impact of differences in state and local regulations and policy, input from other members of the team, and variations in requirements for use of specific tools for evaluation were identified. Knowledge of the individual elements within the team decision-making activity system and the interactions and tensions that arise between elements may assist in understanding practice patterns of SLPs in U.S. schools. There are common tensions experienced by school SLPs regarding evaluation and eligibility of students. Using the CHAT framework enables acknowledgment of the interplay of elements within the broader activity system (beyond the SLP) and promotes the importance of teamwork and advocacy by SLPs at the local, state and national level. Inconsistency and tensions in school team decision-making are well documented in the research literature. Once identified, information on inconsistency and tensions can be used to develop of strategies to improve practice. The findings identify needs and solutions to strengthen school teams’ and SLPs’ knowledge of the regulations, research, and advocacy to address challenges in the school setting. Use of evidence-based practices for evaluation and compliance with IDEA regulations for data collection and decision making will reduce mis- and overidentification and protect students’ civil rights. Improving consistency by school decision-making teams will enable all students to receive quality evaluations and appropriate decision-making regardless of where they live or attend school. Consistency in evaluation and eligibility processes is essential to advance SLPs’ professional practice and build or maintain trust between families, students, and public-school professionals across the United States.

Marie Ireland celebrating


Tuesday, 25 July 2023

Supporting educators’ emotional work with infants and their families around transitions at the start the day

The following paper has just been published.

Dolby, R., Friezer, B., Hughes, E., Page, J. & Meade, V. (2023) Supporting educators’ emotional work with infants and their families around transitions at the start the day, Early Years, 1 - 14, DOI: 10.1080/09575146.2023.2235911

Congratulations Belinda. Here is the abstract:

This article describes the professional development program, Baby Playspace Learning (BPL), and evaluates its capacity to build close relationships between educators, parents, their infants and infant peers during the morning transitions in ECEC settings. Using a pre-post design, video recordings of 20 (10 pre and 10 post) morning transitions were collected across a 12-month period and analysed for developing closeness, by measuring the frequency of triangular interactions, educators’ use of relational language and physical availability (sitting down, being still and holding infants in a curled position to relax). All measures of closeness increased significantly post-test, indicating that BPL created more opportunities for building closeness between all parties. BPL can enhance educator professionalism by showing educators how to engage in practices that help them to realise close relationships in a group setting. This gives parents, infants and infant peers the experience of belonging to a secure base culture where closeness is valued.


18th World Congress for the World Association for Infant Mental Health

 There were two fabulous presentations by ECIR members at the 18th World Congress for the World Association for Infant Mental Health, Dublin, Ireland.

  • Belinda Friezer; Linda J. Harrison; Sheena Elwick: Researcher and educator interpretations of microanalytic observations of infant sociality (Brief Oral Presentation), presented on the 18th July, 2023, SOURCE-WORK-ID: fe63c5dd-20d3-4b05-803c-6775bf92c8f7.
  • Belinda Friezer; Linda J. Harrison; Sheena Elwick: Infant-peer triads in the caregiving context of childcare, presented on the 16th July 2023, SOURCE-WORK-ID: fe63c5dd-20d3-4b05-803c-6775bf92c8f7.

Congratulations!


Friday, 21 July 2023

Statistical learning or phonological universals? Ambient language statistics guide consonant acquisition in four languages

 The following paper has just been published.

Contreras Kallens, P., Elmlinger, S., Wang, K., Goldstein, M., Crowe, K., McLeod, S., & Christiansen, M. (2023). Statistical learning or phonological universals? Ambient language statistics guide consonant acquisition in four languages. In I. M. Goldwater, F. K. Anggoro, B. K. Hayes, & D. C. Ong (Eds.), Proceedings of the 45th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 3290-3296). https://escholarship.org/uc/item/3wj6767p

Congratulations Sharynne and Kate. Here is the abstract:

What predicts individual differences in children’s acquisition of consonant production across languages? Considerations of children’s development of early speech production have traditionally emphasized inherent physiological constraints of the vocal apparatus that speakers generally have in common (i.e., articulatory complexity). In contrast, we propose a statistical learning account of phonological development, in which phonological regularities of the ambient language guide children’s learning of those regularities in production. Across four languages (English, Spanish, Japanese, and Korean), we utilized recent meta-analytic dataset of age of consonant acquisition spanning 28 studies. High-density measures of children's ambient language environment from over 8,000 transcripts of speech directed to over 1,000 children were used to assess how well the frequency of consonants in childdirected speech predict the age of consonant acquisition. Our results suggest that both frequency and articulatory complexity are related to age of acquisition, with similar results found for English, Spanish, Japanese, and Korean. Consonants heard frequently by children tended to be incorporated into their production repertoires earlier and consonants heard less frequently are incorporated into production repertoires later in development. We discuss future directions that incorporate a statistical learning pathway towards learning to produce the sound patterns of the ambient language.


Friday, 14 July 2023

President of the International Clinical Phonetics and Linguistics Association (ICPLA)

Congratulations Sharynne McLeod on being elected President of the International Clinical Phonetics and Linguistics Association (ICPLA) for the next 4 years. Sharynne has had a long-standing relationship with ICPLA, having served as Australiasian representative from 2000-2006, then Vice President from 2006-2018. She also served on the editorial board of CLP since 2006.

ICPLA executive: Dr Alice Lee, A/Prof Joanne Cleland, Prof Sharynne McLeod, Prof Vesna Stojanovik

ICPLA19 - Poster presentations

ECIR members presented three posters at the International Clinical Phonetics and Linguistics Association (ICPLA) symposium:

  • Poster #17 Caitlin Hurley, Sharynne McLeod and Robert Anthonappa: Children’s speech and premature loss of primary maxillary incisors
  • Poster # 27 Sharynne McLeod and Julie Marshall: Accomplishment of the Sustainable Development Goals requires communication
  • Poster #36 Kate Crowe, Harpa Stefánsdóttir, Egill Magnússon, Mark Guiberson, Thora Másdóttir, Ösp Vilberg Baldursdóttir and Inga Ágústsdóttir: How is speech intelligibility measured for children who are d/Deaf or hard of hearing

Congratulations!

Kate Crowe and Sharynne McLeod