91ÇàÇà²Ý

News

Young people seeking solutions for better future

Millennium Youth Prize is a new technology competition for 14 to 18-year-olds.
youth_prize_en_en.jpg

Aalto University and Technology Academy Finland are running for the first time a technology competition for 14 to 18-year-olds. Millennium Youth Prize invites young people to present solutions to current global challenges by drawing on health technologies and new sustainable development energy solutions. The participants receive the challenges to be solved from Aalto professors Heikki J. Nieminen, Anton Kuzyk, Mari Lundström and Peter Lund.

‘Through this award, we want to inspire young people to engage with technology and innovation and to find new kinds of solutions. Young people have the keys to a better future for all of us’, affirms Tuija Pulkkinen, Vice President of Aalto University.

Participants can send their solutions as either written reports, videos, prototypes or any combination of these. The assessment criteria are scientific rigour, creativity, innovativeness and viability.

Those submitting the best solutions will be invited to the Junction event to be held on Aalto University campus in November 2018, where a panel of experts will announce the winners. A total of €10 000 of prize money will be awarded. The competition will run from 23 May to 4 November 2018.

The international one-million-euro Millennium Technology Prize is Finland’s tribute to innovations for a better life and sustainable development. The winner of this year’s Millennium Technology Prize will be announced on 22 May in Helsinki. The new Millennium Youth Prize is being run in the same spirit as its older forebear: the competition’s categories are the same as the prize categories for previous years of the Millennium Technology Prize and both awards encourage the development of new solutions for improving quality-of-life.

Aalto University will be holding a public lecture for the winner of the Millennium Technology Prize at 9.00 on 23 May in the Undergraduate Centre in Otaniemi. After the lecture, Aalto University will be offering upper secondary school students the opportunity to meet the prize winner in person. This opportunity is open to the first 50 students who register for it.

Further information:

  • Other videos on the competition website, to be subtitled in English in May.
  • Veli-Matti Ikävalko, Coordinator, Aalto University Junior, veli-matti.ikavalko@aalto.fi, +358 50 351 1103
  • Updated:
  • Published:
Share
URL copied!

Read more news

Two flags at Aalto University: a pride flag and a yellow flag. A modern building and green trees are in the background.
Press releases Published:

LGBTQ-Friendly Firms More Innovative

Firms with progressive LGBTQ policies produce more patents, have more patent citations, and have higher innovation quality as measured by patent originality, generality, and internationality.
Two interconnected circular loops; one blue labelled 'Simulation DBTL loop', one brown labelled 'Real-world DBTL loop'.
Awards and Recognition, Press releases, Research & Art Published:

A revolution for R&D with the missing link of machine learning — project envisions human-AI expert teams to solve grand challenges

Samuel Kaski receives ERC Advanced Grant to develop new machine learning that is robust, generalisable and engages human experts.
A man in a suit standing next to a large green metal door in an underground bunker.
Press releases Published:

Doctoral thesis: Finland’s civil defence shelters protect nearly everyone – but hotter summers may test their limits

Built over decades, Finland’s civil defence shelter system covers almost the entire population and has cost the equivalent of three years of defence spending.
Laajalahti nature reserve in Espoo
Press releases, Research & Art Published:

Rising sea could erase a significant portion of coastal habitats in Finland

More than a fifth of coastal meadows and sandy beaches may disappear by the turn of the century.