The CO:RE KB aims to have a substantial impact for researchers, policymakers, educational stakeholders and society at large, by drawing together European research and evidence in an easy to use online resource for stakeholders to apply to their relevant contexts. In the first reporting period, the consortium achieved impact in the five identified areas below:
Knowledge transfer: The consortium conducted the required groundwork to build the CO:RE EB and DD. The contribution period to collect and code the available research and evidence of their respective countries ended on 30 September 2021. The database encompasses over 1,700 annotated publication entries and more than 1,300 annotated study entries, all published since 2014 in Europe. This effort is unparalleled and helps overcome language barriers that exist for evidence on smaller countries given the linguistic diversity in Europe.
Enhancing research engagement: During the first reporting period, the consortium hosted a total of nine webinars and six associated discussion forums, released multiple blog series, a vlog series, and two short reports tailored to the research community. With these activities, the consortium reached 125,000+ people as direct participants, ex-post viewers or via social media channels. Given that the CO:RE KB is to be made publicly available in the second reporting period, the consortium regards the reach already as a great success.
Facilitating research: The consortium teams have built the foundation for facilitating research on the topic of children and young people online in Europe. Not only has the first period successfully implemented regular stakeholder events that foster dialogue between researchers, educators, policymakers and families to provide better-suited evidence for better future policy, but also has prepared all necessary steps for the publishing of the EU Kids Online (2018-19) data sets for reuse, which shall be intensively promoted via the CO:RE KB. This unrivalled collective effort fosters new research engagements as it allows researchers to identify hot topics and blind spots across all disciplines concerned with the subject matter, points to trends in policy and education and promotes mutual understanding amongst stakeholders.
Impact on policy: The consortium has hosted a range of synchronous and asynchronous policy and education stakeholder events and fostered intensive dialogue between all stakeholders. It has successfully implemented policy and educational stakeholder event series and a policy brief series, reporting on distilled research findings and clear links to policy implications for policy and education stakeholders on the one hand and on key policy issues of relevance to European audiences on the other, drawing on relevant regional, national and international contexts for the research community to respond to societal needs and challenges.
Sustainability: In the first half of the project, the consortium has set the foundation for the CO:RE KB to be made publicly available at the turn of the year. After the launch, all stakeholders are invited to flag relevant research and evidence to be included in the CO:RE EB. This allows the project to remain up-to-date on the European research landscape.
In terms of a sustainable continuation of the CO:RE KB, the consortium has already begun assessments for further funding opportunities after the first reporting period. The Leibniz Institute for Media Research | Hans-Bredow-Institut (HBI) leads these efforts and will function as coordinator for further funding periods.