$1 million to connect Kiwis with science
Science and Innovation Minister Steven Joyce today announced the successful applicants for the $1 million Unlocking
Curious Minds Contestable fund.
“The Unlocking Curious Minds pilot fund is an important step towards engaging more New Zealanders to learn about
science, particularly our young people"
The fund offers two levels of grants: up to $20,000 for local projects, and up to $150,000 for regional or national
projects.
“It is great to see high demand for the fund, with a number of impressive proposals from a wide range of applicants,
including community organisations, schools, charitable trusts, universities, Crown research institutes, and the business
sector.
Applicants have really got into the spirit of the fund and identified a wide range of topics and projects, from
monitoring bats and birds in UawaTolaga Bay, to mathematical modelling in South Auckland and underwater robotics at the
top of the South Island” says Mr Joyce.
“As a result, a total of 28 applications spanning a range of science and technology topics have been awarded funding.”
Other successful applications include:
• a mobile teaching and research laboratory in a shipping container that will tour around South Island rural schools
• a project to engage at risk youth in Otago, Southland and Auckland with science using waka as a travelling science
classroom.
• a two day science camp for primary and intermediate school girls in the Wairarapa.
• a programme for primary school children in Otara, using kid-friendly kits to test for kauri dieback
The Unlocking Curious Minds fund is being implemented alongside a participatory science platform that will create
research partnerships between communities and scientists.
The platform is being piloted in South Auckland, Taranaki and Otago this year. Lead organisations were recently
appointed for each pilot area, along with a national co-ordinator.
Both initiatives were identified in the blueprint for the Science in Society project,A Nation of Curious Minds He Whenua
Hihiri i te Mahara, which was developed in response to the National Science Challenges Panel’s leadership challenge to
improve the understanding, skills, and adoption of science and technology in New Zealand.
More information about the Unlocking Curious Minds contestable fund and the participatory science platform can be found
here.
ends