One of the goals of the Research, Development, and Innovation (RDI) functions at Universities of Applied Sciences (UAS) is to connect the surrounding society to the outcomes of the work that they undertake. Each year many projects and research are started, continued and completed by UASs throughout Finland that can have a great impact on the surrounding local society. From the institutional perspective, it can be difficult to make the outcomes or relevance of these projects known outside of the institution in a coherent way. But the entire purpose of them is to improve society in some capacity.
It is important that companies and organisations know that they can reach out to UAS institutions and figure out if there is anything that would help develop services, products, customer’s experience, or even processes. There are many ways to get connected to work that is happening in your local community. This post aims to list the most common ways that business, organisations, and even individuals with ideas can reach out to UASs to benefit from their research, development and innovation (RDI) work.
There are also many different ways to benefit from this work. It can be on an individual level, unit level, or entire organisational level. This will depend on your own preference or capacity. Here are some ways that you or your organisation can connect with the university of applied science in your area (or beyond).
Multi-disciplinary Innovation Projects
It is becoming more common for institutions to create experiential learning in regards to different aspects of business development. This allows students to work with organisations and businesses to solve real problems.
At Metropolia University of Applied Sciences there is MINNO (multi-disciplinary innovation) Projects. These are experiential courses available for all students to take. It is a course that consists of 10 ECTS for the students. But more importantly, it is the ability for organisations to connect with the institution and to bring challenges for a diverse group of students to work on. The MINNO Project was recently lauded by the World Economic Forum as one of their 13 Skills-First Lighthouses. “The Skills-First Lighthouse recognition is given for practical and innovative activities that benefit society and individuals by identifying, strengthening and articulating skills in a work-life context.”
This will require your organisation to work together with the students to look for innovative solutions to the real problems you bring. If you want to consider putting your company forward to take part in MINNO, you can find more information about how to do it on the Metropolia website.
Accessing Available Courses for Upskilling
If there is a need or want to upskill individuals in an organisation, there are many courses available that have been created by the institutions from the work that has been completed in the Research, Development, and Innovation units and other units. These can be taken for free or with a small fee and cover a large range of topics. Most of the courses created by UASs come with academic credits attached but whether these are utilised or not is up to the individual.
Metropolia UAS, Haaga-Helia UAS, and Laurea UAS work together under the 3UAS (or 3AMK in Finnish) brand and through this website, it is possible to access the courses that are available. There are courses at almost every institution in Finland. In the future, there will the possibility to also access courses that are given through the U!reka European University partners also. The extent of which will become clearer in the next year or two.
While the MINNO project has companies working with groups of students on real business problems, there are many individual courses or even mini-courses that can be taken by anyone. In 2023, Metropolia launched the Service Design Sprint MOOC (Massive Online Open Course) which is available to anyone at anytime. It is free of charge and, if desired, can earn the participant 2 ECTS credits. This course will guide the participant through the process of using service design to solve business problems. It will also show you how it is possible to do this in a rapid and controlled manner. Because this course is available any time and for anyone, it could easily be done in someone’s free time or sponsored by a company with time given to complete the course.
Open University
For many years, open university courses have been available for anyone to take. This has not changed. In fact, open university courses from different educational institutions are becoming increasingly popular. It is important to note that the ‘open university’ in Finland is not one thing (like it is for example in the UK), each institution has its own version and these must be searched individually on each institution’s own portal.
Live Cohort Courses
Another way to access knowledge and upskilling opportunities is to join specific offerings through individual projects themselves. The Luovi project is a great example of how individuals and companies or organisations can take part in what is happening in their local UAS. Luovi is a set of trainings and upskilling for individuals working in the creative sector. It covers general working skills but in entrepreneurship, sustainability, digital skills, marketing, and branding. These skills are to support those in the creative sector who need to upskill in these areas. The other benefit of this kind of course is networking. You will get to meet people who are in similar or adjacent fields as yourself and create a community around the skills you learn. This is just one example of this kind of course. Contact the UAS near you to see if there are any courses that you could take part in.
Connecting With Classes
An additional, yet more informal, way to interact with the UAS expertise is to connect with lecturers of certain classes that are teaching what you are interested in. This can help provide the students with real cases with real organisations. For example, a small company (~6 employees) from the food industry connected with a lecturer in a marketing class to help them to explore some possibilities for market expansion. The company did not have enough staff, expertise, or financial resources to achieve usable results on their own, so they provided the problem to the students and allowed them to work on this real case and provide some real results for the company.
Connecting with Collaborative Platforms
Metropolia UAS has three innovation hubs which encompass seven collaborative platforms where collaboration is essential. The Hubs cover three thematic areas that are important to the institution:
- Clean and Sustainable Solutions
- Smart and Creative City
- Future Proof Health and Wellbeing
Companies or organisations who work in these thematic areas are welcome to contact the Hubs and Collaborative Platforms. More information is available on each of their webpages:
- Carbon Garage – supports companies with their green transition and bringing sustainability solutions into action.
- CuWeRe – aims to build a more meaningful cultural wellbeing field in Finland and beyond.
- Garage – includes the Robo Garage and the AIoT Garage where they offer a physical location, resources, and equipment for quick and longer experiments as well as large-scale implementation projects.
- Helsinki XR Center – is the largest innovation, development and startup center in the Nordics dedicated to Extended Reality (XR) technologies.
- Metropolia Workshop – (the Koskelo Workshop) is a flexible project workshop for automotive and mechanical engineering research, development and innovation (RDI) projects. Along with students and expert staff, they can implement projects from small-scale testing to larger projects.
- SmartLab – this smart home platform allows technologies, interfaces, and practices to be tested and developed and can be used to develop user-friendly solutions that serve housing.
- Urbanfarmlab – consists of show-room and co-working space as well as controlled indoor farming spaces for technical and other pilots including generating new business models, indoor farming technologies and solutions.
There are many different opportunities to collaborate with your local Universities of Applied Sciences as business owners or organisations. You can do small projects, individual professional development, and even larger business and product or service development projects. The first step is to determine what is the scope of the development you are wanting or willing to commit to. Then to search through the University of Applied Sciences website that you want to work with to see what options might be available. There will always be someone on the other end that will help to find the right people to collaborate with.
Author
Pamela Spokes works as a Service Designer in Metropolia’s RDI team. Originally from Canada, Pamela has years of experience in university admin focusing on international recruitment, marketing, and the international student/staff experience. With a Bachelor’s from Canada, a Master’s degree from Sweden, an MBA in Service Innovation & Design from Laurea, and her AmO from Haaga-Helia, she is interested in purposefully designed experiences that are centred around the user. Don’t be surprised if she knocks on your door to talk about learning co-creation methods through intensive learning experiences.
Ei kommentteja