Text and Photo: Charlotte Tybjerg Sørensen, AAU Communication and Public Affairs. Translation by LeeAnn Iovanni, AAU Communication and Public Affairs
As many as 15 of AAU's 17 departments sent researchers to the workshop that took place on 14 March at AAU Innovate.
- I’m delighted with the great support across departments and faculties and impressed that we had received 20 presentations with relevant research and ideas for mission research projects that were presented at the workshop, says Mission Officer Niels Bech Lukassen who is also Head of the Mission Secretariat.
The many presentations and participants at the workshop came about after the Mission Management and Mission Officer visited AAU's departments and met with local management and researchers about the mission.
- We’ve opted for a bottom-up process where the researchers themselves come up with proposals within the mission framework rather than us defining the projects, and there seems to be support for this, says Niels Bech Lukassen.
Great openness and desire for discussion
At the workshop, a number of the researchers presented their ideas for mission projects. Here are some examples:
- When children and young people are not thriving in school and school itself is not thriving with (today’s) children and young people. On alternative school forms and new paths to well-being.
Ulla Højmark Jensen, Lars Birch Andreasen, Ahrong Yang Nissen, Department of Culture and Learning
- Digital Emotion Regulation. The project is about improving children and young people's long-term emotional well-being through jointly created and empirically validated digital support tools.
Niels van Berkel, Department of Computer Science
- Joining forces on youth well-being. New partnerships and inclusion of young people's ideas about well-being and meaningful communities, and preventive and well-being-promoting initiatives in and outside education at a political, organisational, cultural, conceptual, and pedagogical/didactic level.
Lars Domino Østergaard, Henrik Vardinghus-Nielsen and Ludvig Johan Torp Ramussen, Department of Health Science and Technology
They then went into four themed groups: young people's well-being, schoolchildren's well-being, children and young people's digital lives, and well-being across physical and digital spaces.
See the slides from the workshop - including all pitches and contact persons - here.