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

New theory suggests some black holes might predate the Big Bang

Cosmologists A. Coley from Canada's Dalhousie University and B. Carr from Queen Mary University in London, have published a paper on arXiv, where they suggest that some so-called primordial black holes might have been created in the Big Crunch that came before the Big Bang, which lends support to the theory that the Big Bang was not a single event, but one that occurs over and over again as the universe crunches down to a single point, then blows up again, over and over. more »

Mobile phones could be charged by the power of speech

For mobile phone users, a flat battery or a lost charger are among the frustrations of modern life. more »

Scientists turn pineapples into plastic

Scientists in Brazil have developed a method of turning pineapples, banana peels and other fibrous plants into plastic. The researchers say the material is strong, lightweight and eco-friendly and will soon replace conventional plastics in auto manufacturing. more »

Hummingbirds reveal secrets of sipping

Research released this week has debunked a 180-year-old theory of how hummingbirds gather nectar. Using high speed cameras and some ingenuity, a graduate student at the University of Connecticut slowed down time to get a better look at how the tiny birds eat more »

Electric car battery boasts record range of 450 km per charge

A German company has developed a battery-powered electric car capable of driving 450 kilometres on a single charge. By comparison, the Nissan Leaf has a range of 160 kilometres per charge and Chevrolet's Volt, about 70 kilometres. more »

Floating cities may be habitats of the future

As our planet becomes more crowded, city planners and architects are trying to come up with new ideas for future human habitation. We've seen biospheres and proposals for underground housing, but now one Boston-based architectural firm has come up with a conceptual plan that envisages cities that float. more »

Mars rover „Curiosity“ primed for launch to Red Planet

While the US shuttle programme may be winding down, the drive to explore our solar system is as strong as ever. Mars is still the focus for many scientists and excitement is growing about November's scheduled launch of the latest Mars rover, Curiosity, now in its final stages of testing at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in California. more »

Battery-powered plane aims to electrify business travel

A German company hopes to run the world's first all-electric commercial aircraft business after successful test flights of its prototype aircraft, the Elektra One. more »

Agricultural Robots to Help Commercial Farmers Soon

In the future, the commercial farms could possibly be managed by robots, which would spray, identify and pick produce from plants such as peppers, grapes and apples. more »

Lasers could replace spark plugs in car engines

Car engines could soon be fired by lasers instead of spark plugs, researchers say. more »