Is a Living Lab Also a Learning Lab?—Exploring Co-Creational Power of Young People in a Local Community Food Context
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“How can the elements of the Living Lab approach in the context of the food system transformation be used as a shared learning facility for young people and local food systems actors?”
- How can young people’s voices be taken into account in such a Living Labs approach? The living lab concept itself promotes the idea of user engagement for co-creation. However, making young people curious about contemporary societal issues and engaging them in finding solutions is an issue.
- How can outreach to the local community be applied to create engagement across different actor groups? Engagement across various actor groups needs a certain strategic plan, and it might be difficult to maintain within-school outreach to local community programs.
- How can the school’s environment and its learning opportunities be taken advantage of? The school environment itself reflects the formal space of learning, but how to utilize it for young people’s engagement in an open learning space.
2. Conceptual Framework
2.1. Living Lab Approach
2.2. Problem- or Project-Based Learning (PBL)
2.3. The STEM Teaching Approach
2.4. SESAM Program—Use Case of the Learning Lab
3. Methods—Case Study Design
3.1. Case Description—SESAM Learning Lab at Læringshuset
3.2. Data Collection and Ethical Considerations
3.3. Data Analysis
4. Results and Analysis
4.1. Pupil-Driven Exploration and Project-Based Work That Facilitates Learning
4.1.1. Self Exploration—A DYI (Do-Yourself-In) Approach That Stimulates Self-Learning
“[...] The course is fun, and it is fun to make jams where you can determine the taste yourself” it’s a kinda science-up the teaching.”—Marta, pupil
“She explains how she thinks that what they are doing right now has probably been the most fun. Both because they are allowed to experiment, but also because they themselves have chosen groups.”—Carl, mentor
“I don’t start asking the teacher, I try it out myself. I might be asking classmates or try to look it up on YouTube first up, Then I might consider asking the teacher.”—Emil, pupil
“We’ve used it a lot to train the children, this is a fantastic project to train the children to work independently, to help each other. They are very happy to learn this at an early age. It’s making it SO much easier when they come up in the larger classes and they’re really good at it.”—Tina, teacher
4.1.2. Exploring to Design Technological Solutions That Facilitate Team Work, Innovation and Design Thinking
“We’re working on prototypes in a lot of different ways. We have used strawberries, we have used tomatoes, and we have also drawn both computer and hand, and try to make 2D drawings about 3D drawings, for example.”—Tina, teacher
“……it was a bit the same as when you were able to put the barcodes and the app together. Because, it’s a bit like that. It’s a bit new since there was no app that both has a barcode scanner and is an app, so it’s a bit like this: Now that they’ve put these two things together—it can help with something new.”—Maria, pupil
“This has certainly affected them positively. They have acquired a lot of food waste reduction competences within and about practices for reducing food waste.”—Kirstine, teacher
“They have also learned a lot of things about how we can use different technologies together to get a general understanding, but also about tools to reduce food waste and assist the general citizen.”—Kirstine, teacher
4.1.3. Understanding Cutting-Edge Technology through Co-creation and Mentoring
“We have looked at how 2D barcodes on food products can combine these with a food waste app. So that you can easily gain knowledge about the date and proper storage, and how to use foods that soon end up all to avoid food waste.”—Mats and Freja, pupils
“We also did some exercise on emission calculation here—a sort of CO2 Footprint Calculator, where you are using the same type of technology, you could compete with your friends to see the carbon Footprint of your meals.”—Peter, mentor
“It’s the big opening today but we’ve been working with the kids here for 18 months around the ideas of food waste, safety and barcodes. And here we are—kids will tell you more about it.”—Mats, mentor.
4.1.4. Addressing Real-Life World Problems to Stimulate Pupils’ Passion for Learning
“You engage people in computational thinking and activities that need to have real world relevant projects to them. It needs to be passion driven, need to be together with peers.”—Peter, mentor
“……the science became quite clear to the students in relation to being able to take some of the concepts and things we have talked about and what we have learned about, that is, acid and alkalis, pH value, we have been out and examine eco systems in nature, water, holes, etc.”—Mette, teacher
“…. this is where we have re-grown vegetables that we would like to be in such a mini-greenhouse, you might say.”—Anastasia, pupil
“…. So you could have it in your own home. Because, there are a lot of people who don’t have the ability to grow vegetables there. It was a bit like that.”—Emil, pupil
4.1.5. Choosing Tangible Problems May Create Better Scientific Learning
“It has an easier time putting practice together with the theoretical and the scientific, when you have a problem that needs to be solved.”—Kirstine, teacher
“I was surprised by how they made yoghurt. That you put something in—which I don’t remember, what was- and then it turned into yoghurt, I couldn’t understand it at all at the beginning.”—Livia, pupil
4.2. Engagement of Various Outside Actors as Mentors That Creates a New Learning Space
4.2.1. Invite an Outside Mentor to Make Learning More Formal
“I found it very exciting when there are some people who can tell us something. They know something about food games, but they can also show you how. It can seem more interesting and more exciting when you have been told something about it.”—Luna, pupil
“They might think it was a boring professor type who was sitting somewhere far away. …So that you’re not a Professor locked in an office behind a lot of books.”—Kirstine, teacher
4.2.2. Collaborating with Mentors Requires Planning and Structure
“I would like to see the connection between the university and the schools improved. It became too fluffy for some colleagues who became frustrated from time to time. They clearly called for structure and an intermediary.”—Søren, teacher
“We just did something in the unknown, and hoped that it would hit the spot.”—Karen, teacher
4.2.3. Using the PBL Approach to Facilitate a Sense of Collaboration among Actors
“This is also a playful way to have a competition, but also allow students to see, how much carbon they could generate or a playful kind of experimental game to see how we reduce that.”—Peter, mentor
“… In other words, I think that from a project-based learning point of view—the school’s point of view—you might be able to say the problem—is a little tight. As we have an overall framework for the project, where we (School ed.) are very happy. … This approach where we start saying—we have a problem—do something about it fits well in our PBL work. Next step is just to add some sub-categories so the solution can be operationalizing.”—Kirstine, teacher
4.2.4. Project Orientation, External Collaboration and Challenges Can Create Authenticity
“… and we prefer authentic projects with a lot of partners in order to make it as realistic as possible.”—Mats, teacher
“So, of course, there is something in the planning. Where you can hit a challenge in and with that also depending on the size of the subject and interdisciplinary subjects and projects, that there may be something that is set aside for a period of time.”—Kirstine, teacher
“…But if you are a general primary and lower secondary school with a standard form of Danish, nature and technology, Physics, chemistry, etc. then it’s a bit difficult to get the lessons out to the project, since you tend to become locked in your schedules. Where, in principle, we can move our hours around so it fits in. So I think that it’s about flexibility in the Danish primary and lower secondary school.”—Mats, teacher
“Now it’s just been put into something authentic, which means that the children think ‘ not, we can use it for something. And not something we just have to read about in a book.”—Kirstine, teacher
4.3. Project-Based Teaching That Could Familiarize Real-Life Societal Challenges
4.3.1. Project-Based Teaching Requires Good Communication and Good Didactic Models
“In terms of the period, the biggest challenge is that we have had too little time to plan the process. Next time, we will hopefully know in advance when things are going to kick off.”—Søren, teacher
“I think, I could have used a clearer guideline for what kind of process they would like us to have as teachers. We should have had better didactic tools and they should have been better disseminated.”—Søren, teacher
“It’s just really hard to have to work inside this with STEM and project work in general, and that’s because it’s becoming very intangible in relation to methods and application.”—Mats, teacher
“I believe it is also a question of how you as a teacher might not be quite as well trained in how to conduct research based teaching in this way. Because there is actually no time for that.”—Mats, teacher
“If I’m better equipped and the focus and framework for the project is taken up more sharply, the project has a huge potential.”—Anna, teacher
4.3.2. Balancing between the Pupil’s Autonomy and Guidance from Mentors in the Project Works
“Mathilde says that there is no more than half a litter of milk, because the cheese group also has to use milk. The girls agree to ask a teacher because the recipe says that they need a whole litter. Mathilde is standing up to the table and is standing up, while she insistently looks at the teacher who is in the cheese group.… A couple of other groups also need to clarify some questions Mathilde is steadfast, patient and quiet, but still with insistent questioning gaze, until the teacher finally gets down and says that they have to adjust the recipe according to the amount of milk they have, and that they can do it themselves.”—Researcher observation
“You decided just like yourself—it’s also a bit more fun. And it was also just something different from food at school than usual. This is not something you have tried before.”—Maria, pupil
“Yes, and if we use different learning methods to learn different things, I also think it will be easier to learn it.”—Rasmus, pupil
“She explains that she does not think it has always been so fun, when she has been in a group with people she does not know. But it’s fun with this group because we’re doing a lot of fun, but we’re still doing something.”—Researcher observation
4.3.3. Linking Technology and Food Can Be the Perfect Storm for a STEM Teaching Approach
“The idea is to turn these into activities for different schools to use computers to explore concepts like data and privacy. And to create a relationship between math, science and computers. And at the same time to design technology for relevant problems, especially in the food waste area.”—Peter, mentor
“At first it was not what we had expected, but I like that we gradually went a bit more into the direction of chemistry and physics.”—Oliver, pupil
“She says that she has learned that you extend shelf life of food if you do something about it. Just like the cheese. I ask her why she believes it is sustainable. She doesn’t know what to answer. She thinks it’s difficult.”—Søren, teacher
4.3.4. Real-Life Problems for Projects Works Can Help Pupils Match Problems with Solutions
“We worked on a project where we examined whether you could use something of an overcut vegetable to grow a new one, to avoid food waste. And we demonstrate that we could!”—Marius, pupil
“This is the good thing about running project-based teaching. Everyone has some competences to offer and, depending on the student’s interest in background.”—Kirstine, teacher
“But also in relation to the fact that you have the opportunity to give the academic strong pupils some challenges. In the meantime, there are others who may not be so academically strong to solve some other challenges. So in other words, there is really a room for being able to differentiate (challenges ed)”—Tina, teacher
“I think this (the project) was very cool, but the teachers have not been particularly good at explaining exactly what you need to do. It has been a lot like that for day-to-day. So the teachers will probably explain it much better, so you understand it. (...). But otherwise it’s been a pretty cool week. I think I learned a lot”—Ada, pupil
“We have done a lot of projects so far, and it has always been a bit the same, but now it started to become easier to communicate with others when you do projects so many times.”—Emil, pupil
4.3.5. Balancing Practice and Theory May Motivate Pupils for Learning
“A book-based academic part would be extremely boring for many kids, but simply slamming this new barcodes and some app making tools on the table motivated them (the pupils, eds) them in a very positive way.”—Kirstine, teacher
“It was quite clear that it was more practice. That we could go into it and do something from scratch. It has also been easier to remember things, so that it all fits better into the full picture.”—Emil, pupil
“Yes 100% and create more interest in the natural sciences, because there has not been so much theory and we have to create something ourselves. I think that all of you like that, all young people, instead of, because a lot of theory can be dull in the long term.”—Ada, pupil
“Yes, I also think it can be very heavy if you only make written assignments, only make reading material, so I think it’s also very exciting, but quite clearly the alternation between the practical and the theoretical has made a difference.”—Liv, pupil
4.4. Summary of Analysis
5. Discussion
5.1. Young People’s Involvement as a Co-Creator in Order to Facilitate Learning
5.2. Outreach to the Local Community and Engagement across Different Actor Groups
5.3. PBL and the School Environment as a Potential Living Lab
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
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Tools and Abbreviations | Definition |
---|---|
Science Workshop (SW) | A functional demonstration, installation, station, or mock-up that illustrates a research set-up |
SofaTalk (ST) | A scheduled, moderated and seated talk about a research or innovation topic. Can be on the stage or broadcasted from a remote stage using video conferencing tools |
Street and Citizen Science Experiment (SCE) | A citizen science type of research set-up where our guests engage voluntarily and are informed in a behavioral experiment arranged by researchers |
EU Corner (EC) | A booth or counter-like type of service manned by a researcher or expert and offering handouts, for instance, about EU research and vis-à-vis the MSCA presentation stage |
Science Show (SSH) | A scheduled show on a stage moderated by a young researcher |
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Chapagain, M.R.; Mikkelsen, B.E. Is a Living Lab Also a Learning Lab?—Exploring Co-Creational Power of Young People in a Local Community Food Context. Youth 2023, 3, 753-776. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth3020049
Chapagain MR, Mikkelsen BE. Is a Living Lab Also a Learning Lab?—Exploring Co-Creational Power of Young People in a Local Community Food Context. Youth. 2023; 3(2):753-776. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth3020049
Chicago/Turabian StyleChapagain, Mukti R., and Bent Egberg Mikkelsen. 2023. "Is a Living Lab Also a Learning Lab?—Exploring Co-Creational Power of Young People in a Local Community Food Context" Youth 3, no. 2: 753-776. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth3020049
APA StyleChapagain, M. R., & Mikkelsen, B. E. (2023). Is a Living Lab Also a Learning Lab?—Exploring Co-Creational Power of Young People in a Local Community Food Context. Youth, 3(2), 753-776. https://doi.org/10.3390/youth3020049