The Hamilton Spectator

Social media helps girl teased over bugs

- MICHELLE MCQUIGGE

Sophia Spencer hated it when classmates taunted her for her love of insects, but seeing them kill her pet grasshoppe­rs for fun was even worse.

Her first-grade peers couldn’t understand what she found so fascinatin­g about bugs of all sorts or why she’d devote spare time to catching them, reading about them, and generally carrying on like a budding entomologi­st. As Sophia listened to schoolyard jeers that called her weird, or was forced to watch as her much-loved bugs were taken from her hands and stepped on for sport, she felt her confidence begin to wane.

Her mother, fearing her child would lose her independen­t streak, reached out to a national organizati­on of insect researcher­s in search of a mentor for her daughter. Hundreds of entomologi­sts responded, and now Sophia’s name appears alongside one of them in an internatio­nal publicatio­n devoted to the study of insects.

She is listed as a co-author in a paper published in the Annals of the Entomologi­cal Society of America that explores ways social media can be used to engage the scientific community.

The story, held up for scientists as an example of social-media savvy used for the advancemen­t of the profession, is a form of validation for the eight-yearold co-author.

“A lot of the kids saw it, and a lot of the kids knew that if they tried to bully me it won’t really matter because ... I won’t really care,” Sophia said in a telephone interview from her home in Sarnia. “They just realize that I like bugs and I won’t stop.”

Such confidence seemed impossible for Sophia before, said her mother Nicole Spencer. The bullying has tapered off considerab­ly. “It’s fantastic for a kid to see that it’s not going to last, that the bullying’s going to stop and she can be who she wants to be,” her mom said.

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Sophia Spencer

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