MY Camp is targeted at young people (16-19 years) from all parts of the world whose interests lie in mathematics, the natural sciences, information technology and other technologies.
There will be 30 participants (15 girls and 15 boys), 10 from Finland, and all the educational activities, travel, accommodation and food will be provided free of charge.
Participants will be selected on the basis of individual applications using a two-stage process. The application period began on 9 October and the first stage will end on 30 November 2009. The names of the successful applicants will be announced by 15 March 2010.
The multi-faceted MY Camp programme is based on three fundamental pillars - science, technology and nature - and includes lectures, workshops, visits to companies and universities and time for enjoyable social activities. The main themes are Environmental Science and Technology (climate change, renewable natural resources, renewable energy, water), Information and Communication Technology and digitalisation, and Applied Mathematics.
One of the high points in the programme will be the opportunity for MY Camp participants to attend the Millennium Technology Prize Award Ceremony, during which the winning innovation will receive an award of one million euros.
Application forms and the preliminary programme are available at:
http://www.technologyacademy.fi/millennium-youth-camp-fi.html
Organisations responsible for arranging the camp are the Technology Academy Finland, Finland’s LUMA Centre, the Ministry of Education and the Centre for School Clubs.
Cooperation partners include the Ministry for Foreign Affairs of Finland, the Finnish National Board of Education, the Academy of Finland, universities (University of Helsinki, Helsinki University of Technology), the Economic Information Office (TAT), the Federation of Finnish Technology Industries, the Association of Biology and Geography Teachers (BMOL), the Finnish Association of Teachers of Mathematics, Physics, Chemistry and Informatics (MAOL), the Finnish Science Centre Heureka, the Museum of Technology and Finnish companies Kemira, Nokia, UPM and Vaisala.