On this page:

Science Engagement Grants - 2009-10 Winners

Cabinet Secretary for Education and Lifelong Learning Fiona Hyslop announced the winners of the 2009-10 Science Engagement Grants scheme during a visit to Edinburgh Zoo in August 2009.

A list of grant winners for the 2009-10 Science Engagement Grants scheme can be found below.

Argyll and Bute Regional Environmental Education Forum - £4,000 for an environmental education fair in Dunoon which is expected to attract around 1,600 people.

The British Science Association has received:

- £16,000 for the Scottish National Science and Engineering Week Grant Scheme to provide small grants of up to £500 for organisers of events during that week, across Scotland.

- £7500 for Fields, Films and a Branches Forum, a suite of activities led by Scottish branches, including rural events, a forum event for volunteers and feature film screenings accompanied by discussions involving scientists.

- £3,500 for Travelling Scholars - discussion/lecture events for 400 people in remote north Scotland communities.

Café Scientifique Glasgow has £1,242 for monthly public discussion events in Glasgow providing opportunities to meet scientists and discuss their work.

Citadel Youth Centre, Leith, Edinburgh - £7,203 for science activities and mentoring by STEM ambassadors for 150 disadvantaged pupils in the Leith area, many of whom have social and behavioural issues.

Clyde River Foundation - £3,795 for Meet Your River activities for 150 primary pupils in villages/towns along the Clyde Valley highlighting the science in their local river habitats.

Coatbridge College - £3,184 for Science Quest, providing lab-based activities for 380 5-10 year-olds.

Dundee Science Centre (Sensation) has received:

- £17,800 for the Tayside Science Engagement Initiative, a range of activities and events at Sensation for 7,160 people, including 'meet the scientist', Café Scientifique and communication training for local researchers.

- £12,664 for Tayside Community Science Project, providing activities for 375 people in targeted groups (e.g. disaffected teenagers) through work with community groups.

Earth Sciences Trust - £22,735 for activities in primary schools, explaining carbon capture technology to 400 pupils living near the power stations involved, who will then become 'peer explainers' about carbon capture at a public event for 4,000 people at the 2010 Edinburgh International Science Festival.

Edinburgh International Science Festival has received:

- £20,000 for Generation Science to provide science outreach shows to 36,300 primary pupils in urban areas, including areas of deprivation.

- £20,000 for Generation Science to provide outreach shows to 18,000 primary pupils in rural areas.

Engineering Development Trust - £10,000 for Go4SET, engineering-linked 'challenge' activities for 840 S2 pupils in 140 schools in Scotland.

Fife Council - £10,000 for Tomorrow's World Today, a science festival in March 2010 operating across various towns in the area, with an expected audience of 11,660 people.

Glasgow Science Centre has received:

- £34,320 for the development and delivery of activities for 6,200 pre-school children in a new dedicated area which will also be used by parents and people with additional support needs.

- £3,700 for How Fit Are You, opportunities for 1,000 teenagers to learn about science research methodology by measuring their fitness levels over a period of time.

Global Science has received:

- £15,000 for the Regional Technology Challenge, East Scotland challenge activities for 6,000 pupils, using female higher education students as mentors and positive role models.

- £35,000 for Climate Change, Your Future, an East Scotland regional rollout of a successful pilot that takes climate change science to 14,400 people in schools and the wider community.

Institute of Physics - £24,120 for Lab in a Lorry Scotland, a touring lab which will visit 3,260 11 to 14 year-olds in schools across the north-west Highlands, including Lewis and Inverness.

KP Technology - £10,000 for STEM Engagement in Caithness, providing a range of activities including shows for pupils and resources for a community STEM room to be used by 3,900 people.

Macaulay Land Use Research Institute - £25,000 for Murder, Mystery and Microscopes, public discussion events for 1,800 people combining a crime writer and an environmental scientist talking about forensic techniques.

Orkney Science Festival - £2,868 for Astronomy for the Islands, astronomy activities for 460 people in remote islands off the Orkney mainland.

Our Dynamic Earth has received:

- £20,000 for Dynamic Earth Unplugged Community Partners, activities and events for 4,000 people from under-represented groups.

- £20,000 for the Dynamic Earth Space Agency Event Programme, space and astronomy-themed events aimed at 9,500 people in a family audience.

Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh - £20,000 for the Biodiversity Spring Programme 2010, a programme of public events and activities in the new RGBE John Hope Gateway centre, expected to be seen by 25,000 people.

Royal Zoological Society of Scotland has received:

- £35,000 for its Centenary Wild Bus, which will tour primary and secondary schools, providing animal based science workshops.

- 2,160 for Behind the Scenes at the Zoo, opportunities for 30,000 pupils to see GLOW webcasts of science-based jobs at the Zoo.

RSPB Scotland - £16,858 for the Solway Science for Lifelong Learning, activities and resources, including a wheelchair-accessible sensory garden, for 28,300 people visiting the Mersehead Reserve near Dalbeattie, Dumfries and Galloway.

Scottish Association for Marine Science (SAMS) - £5,000 for the Marine Science Festival Oban, a new science festival in May 2010 to reach 2,215 people.

Scottish Council for Development and Industry (SCDI) - £2,700 for Young Engineers and Science Clubs, Scotland North Showcase, a regional final event for 200 primary/secondary pupils involved in school science/engineering clubs.

Scottish Schools Equipment Research Centre (SSERC) - £27,162 for Gene Jury Remote, workshops and discussions for 1,500 primary and secondary pupils on the subject of genetics and ethical implications of research. Resources developed will also have a potential internet audience.

Scottish Seabird Centre has received:

- £17,500 for the Closer2Nature, an outreach project delivered in collaboration with Our Dynamic Earth for up to 8000 primary/secondary pupils on environmental/earth science themes.

- £9,000 for The Save the Planet Show, development and delivery of a new environmental show/workshop to 2,200 pupils and families visiting the Scottish Seabird Centre.

Scottish Stem Cell Network - £17,000 for the Stem Cell Roadshow, pilot of activities for 1200 secondary pupils in 10 to 12 Scottish schools.

TechFest SetPoint - £6,000 for Maths in the Pipeline, pilot activities in Dundee, Perth and Kinross, Argyll and Bute and Western Isles for 290 14 to16 year-olds that apply maths to real life problems of water supply.

UHI Millennium Institute - £35,000 for Science Engagement in the Highlands and Islands, activities involving UHI researchers taking their science to a public/schools audience of 2,510.

University of Aberdeen has received:

- £17,908 for its Public Engagement Partnership Model, researcher-led public/schools activities throughout the year, with an expected total audience of 8,350.

- £5,233 for its Community Cafe Science in Aberdeen City and Shire to support three 'Café Scientifique' projects, in an Aberdeen bookshop, a local health facility and in Banchory.

University of Dundee - £20,000 for PhD students to be recruited and trained as STEM communicators and to deliver a range of activities in and around Dundee, to a public audience of 5,920.

University of Edinburgh has received:

- £10,000 for SCI-FUN in the North of Scotland, delivering outreach science shows to 4,750 secondary pupils in north Scotland.

- £30,695 for Too hot to handle, GLOW-platformed podcasts by university researchers on topical science issues, expected to reach 5,700 secondary pupils.

University of Glasgow - £11,700 for Science and Creativity, an exploration through art, enabling 500 teenagers in the west of Scotland to explore the importance of creativity in science through discussion and project workshops with scientists and musicians.

University of St Andrews - £1,653 for Seaside Science, activities for 250 teenagers visiting St Andrews beach which explain the science behind beach activities such as rock pools and the aerodynamics of kites.

Wild things! - £9,800 for Biodiversity Conservation Days, forest activity days in Moray-Highland for 560 primary-aged children from disadvantaged/remote areas in the north of Scotland.

Page updated: Wednesday, September 23, 2009