Ideas move Europe on spring day

Published: 15 April 2009 y., Wednesday

Mokytojas veda pamoką
Debates and competitions with an EU focus are taking place in schools around the EU as part of spring day for Europe. Commissioners and MEPs are playing their part, visiting schools and answering questions in online chats.

One of spring day’s key events sees public figures going “back to school” to discuss European themes with students. The list of potential guests includes MEPs, European commissioners, university professors and representatives from national and regional authorities. But ultimately it is the students who decide who they’d like to meet and send out the invitations themselves.

The articles in the event’s online spring day magazine are a good starting point for anyone looking for a topic to debate. Recent articles, by students aged 10 to 20, cover the impact on schools of a new plan in Portugal to get everyone using more technology, and the definitions of creativity and innovation – the theme of the 2009 European year.

Spring day is an annual event open to all schools in Europe and elsewhere. Once schools have registered, they have access to the web portal’s activities, competitions, resources, tools and services. They can also communicate with schools all over Europe to exchange ideas and find out more about other cultures.

A network of 31 European ministries of education, known as schoolnet, organises spring day, with funding from the EU.


 

Šaltinis: ec.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Surgeons amputate arms to fit bionic prosthetics

In a world first, doctors in Austria have amputated the arms of two young men and replaced them with bionic prosthetics. The decision to amputate was made after the men had irreversibly lost all movement in their hands. more »

Ultra-realistic robots test our relationship with machines

An ultra-realistic robot, known as a geminoid, is helping psychologists test how we relate to machines... more »

Rainbows without pigments offer new defense against fraud

Scientists from the University of Sheffield have developed pigment-free, intensely coloured polymer materials, which could provide new, anti-counterfeit devices on passports or banknotes due to their difficulty to copy. more »

iRobot Ava mobile robotics platform hands–on at Google Android

iRobot Corp announced plans to create Android applications for the iRobot Ava mobile robotics platform. more »

Lingodroid Robots Invent Their Own Spoken Language

When robots talk to each other, they're not generally using language as we think of it, with words to communicate both concrete and abstract concepts. more »

Science and art combine to reproduce paintings from the past

Using laser and nanotechnology, scientists in Chicago have been able go back in time and uncover how masterpieces from artists like Homer and Van Gogh might have looked like when they were first painted. more »

Exotic behavior when mechanical devices reach the nanoscale

Most mechanical resonators damp (slow down) in a well-understood linear manner, but ground-breaking work by Prof. A. Bachtold and his research group at the Catalan Institute of Nanotechnology has shown that resonators formed from nanoscale graphene and carbon nanotubes exhibit nonlinear damping, opening up exciting possibilities for super-sensitive detectors of force or mass. more »

Clever cars - the next generation

Automated driving systems, such as adaptive cruise control, may be the latest "must have" gizmos but the auto industry is already looking to their successor - cooperative driving - where cars communicate with each other as they go. more »

Quantum dots with built-in charge boost solar cell efficiency by 50%

For the past few years, researchers have been using quantum dots to increase the light absorption and overall efficiency of solar cells. more »

Walking robot sets record

'Ranger' the robot has set a world record for its developers at Cornell University, by walking 40.5 miles non-stop on one charge. more »