CROCUS award for creativity


Via a small antenna, schools, cultural centres, libraries, training agencies and associations of immigrants have been able to receive multimedia and interactive educational material.

CROCUS system architecture diagram (click thumbnail for larger image)

The CROCUS project has been running since November 2000. This year the project founder COSPE (Co-operation for the Development of Emerging Countries) initiated a literary contest. Two themes were proposed for the CROCUS (CROss-CUltural Satellite services for immigrant communities in Europe) competition, which took place in Italy. Non-native Italian children were invited to write a biographical story and all children, regardless of origin, could write a story about a friendship in a multicultural society. Children from all over Italy responded.

The award ceremony for the contest, which received many outstanding entries, took place during a conference held in Florence on the 21 November 2002, at the Palazzo della Signoria, with the support and sponsorship of the Municipality of Florence (Italy). The event also marked the conclusion of the Project s preoperational phase.

CROCUS has enabled individual tutoring, live language sessions via satellite, live audio chatting, an interactive white board and telekiosk support activities to take place said Francesco Feliciani, CROCUS project manager at the European Space Agency. The pilot phase has seen the involvement of more than 30 Italian schools, plus 3 schools in Albania, with more than 250 pupils actively participating.

Project participants (click thumbnail for larger image)

The contest was held in collaboration with the publisher Vannini that produces together with COSPE the series of intercultural and linguistic materials called Hibiscus . The winning entry was awarded a scholarship, with the school attended receiving a free subscription to the CROCUS satellite system as well as teaching materials.

The runners up also received gift packs of Hibiscus teaching materials. To coincide with the successful first Annual CROCUS School contest, the CROCUS system was presented on the 11th November in Padua and the 20th of November in Prato. All participants of the presentation days received a free Guide to Hibiscus intercultural tools and a valid password to access the on-line section of the Crocus system for 15 days.

The success of the CROCUS system, supported under the European Space Agency (ESA) Telecom User Segment programme line, has received much media interest, including an article on the winning entry in the Italian newspaper, L Arena di Verona , with the Italian-Chinese monthly Zhong Yi Bao reporting a description of the CROCUS service.

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