
Meet and learn about the 2020/2021 Student Committee for the Global Health Rehabilitation Initiative at the McGill University School of Physical & Occupational Therapy.
Sep 10, 2020
15 min

Interview with Physiotherapist and McGill Alumna Sara Abassbhay - her journey as a globetrotting clinician, innovator and creative healer across cultural contexts including Singapore and Ghana.
Jan 17, 2020
36 min

OSCAIL: a team of multi-disciplinary researchers conducting a study based in South Africa, Rwanda, Uganda, India, Canada, Ireland, and the UK seeking to develop methods of implementing organised stroke care in low-resource settings. Listen to P. Bidulka, M. Kaddumukasa, and L. Hamilton explain.
Jan 18, 2019
24 min

An interview with Dr. Shaun Cleaver, exploring his Global Health journey and work on social policy for people with disabilities in Zambia.
Oct 1, 2018
18 min

The Myers-Briggs Type Indicator is the most popular personality test in the world. It’s used regularly by Fortune 500 companies and lots of other organizations. Its language of personality types has inspired TV shows and online-dating platforms. Yet, experts in the field of psychometric testing have struggled to validate its results – let alone account for its success.
Myers-Briggs was conceived in the 1920s by a pair of devoted homemakers, novelists, and amateur psychoanalysts, the mother-daughter team of Katherine Briggs and Isabel Briggs Myers. Their multiple-choice questionnaire would make its way from the smoke-filled boardrooms of mid-century New York to Berkeley, California, where it was administered to some of the twentieth century’s greatest creative minds. And it traveled on across the world to London, Zurich, Cape Town, Melbourne, and Tokyo.
How did the homegrown Myers-Briggs questionnaire infiltrate our workplaces, our relationships, our Internet, our lives?
Merve Emre, until recently an assistant professor of English at McGill, explores that story in her new book, "The Personality Brokers: the strange history of Myers-Briggs and the birth of personality testing".
Prof. Emre, now an associate professor at Oxford, joined us in June to discuss the story, shortly before her move to the UK. Her book, published this month, has generated considerable buzz on both sides of the Atlantic. As a New York Times reviewer put it: “’The Personality Brokers’ is history that reads like biography that reads like a novel — a fluid narrative that defies expectations and plays against type.”
Sep 27, 2018
16 min

Dr. Andrew Hatala, GHRI Forum guest, discusses his work and career path as a cultural psychologist; his work with Indigenous healers in Belize, Indigenous people with HIV/AIDS and urban Indigenous youth in Canada.
Jul 18, 2018
22 min

Occupational Therapy students Chamila Anthonypillai, Ela Rutkowski, Melissa Lamble, and Julianne Brown discuss their international clinical fieldwork experiences.
May 25, 2018
20 min

Find out about her career path once leaving the School, her involvement in various healthcare boards and associations, McGill memories and life advice for clinicians today
May 23, 2018
25 min
