Ungt Vísindafólk

About the competition

What is Ungt vísindafólk?

Ungt vísindafólk is Iceland’s national competition for young people who want to work on a research project, develop an idea, present their results and take part in a community of students interested in science, research and innovation.

Participants in Ungt vísindafólk in 2015
The competition gives students an opportunity to present research, ideas and solutions to others.
Purpose

The competition supports young people in thinking, researching and creating.

The goal is to give students an opportunity to work independently on their own project, learn how to formulate a research question, choose a method, work with data or solutions, and present results clearly.

Build research skills

Students practise methods connected to research, critical thinking, source work and presenting results.

Encourage initiative

The competition encourages students to choose a topic they find interesting and develop it through their own questions and ideas.

Connect projects to the wider world

Projects can connect to school, society, environment, technology, health, natural sciences, design or other areas that matter to young people.

Who is it for?

For students with a question, idea or project.

Ungt vísindafólk is intended for upper-secondary students who want to present research, an experiment, a prototype, data analysis, a social issue or other research-related work.

Students

For students who want to take the next step with a project they have worked on or want to develop a new idea.

Teachers

Teachers can help students define a project, shape a research question and prepare a presentation.

Mentors

Projects may be supported by teachers, specialists, schools or others who can provide useful feedback.

The process

How does the competition work?

1. Idea

A student or team chooses a question, problem or idea that can be investigated or developed.

2. Project work

The project is developed through a method, data, experiments, design, sources or testing.

3. Presentation

Students present what they did, why it matters and what results they found.

4. Feedback

Projects receive feedback from a jury, and selected projects may have the opportunity to go further.

Evaluation

What makes a good project?

A good project does not need to be perfect or large. Most importantly, it should be clear, well explained and based on careful work.

Clear question

The project explains what is being investigated, tested or developed.

Careful method

Students can describe how they worked on the project and why they chose that method.

Good presentation

Results are presented clearly, and students can answer questions about the project.

EUCYS

From Iceland to Europe.

Winning projects in the national competition may have the opportunity to take part in the European Union Contest for Young Scientists, EUCYS. There, young scientists from Europe present their work, meet peers with similar interests and take part in an international science community.

The competition is being relaunched

Work is underway to bring Ungt vísindafólk back. More information about dates, registration and format will be published when available.

Want to know more? Students, teachers and schools interested in following the relaunch of the competition can contact us or read the guidance for participants.