Employee portal
News and events
for employees in the Science Faculty Administration
Latest news from the faculty
A word from the dean
22.May.2025
Internationalising Danish research
A necessity in a new geopolitical reality.
A word from the dean
01.May.2025
Big prize goes to students from our faculty
Startup with roots in iGEM takes home prize at SDU Startup Night 2025
A word from the dean's office
10.April.2025
The ambition for the faculty is continued growth
Students admissions as well as research activities are expected to grow at the Faculty of Science.
A word from the vice dean
20.March.2025
Introduction to the new students
Read this brief from Vice Dean for Education Poul Nielsen.
A word from the dean
20.March.2025
Number of applicants increases
The number of applicants is increasing compared to last year for both bachelor's and master's programmes.
A word from the vice dean
27.February.2025
A few administrative changes due to the new pedagogical framework
Read this brief from Vice Dean for Education Poul Nielsen.
A word from the dean
27.February.2025
Regarding the Danish Institute in Damascus
The lifting of EU sanctions against Syria gives hope for the Danish Institute in Damascus, says Dean Marianne Holmer, who is SDU's representative on the board.
Workplace culture
21.February.2025
New function aims to ensure better support for employees experiencing abusive actions
To strengthen the handling of offensive acts in the workplace, the Faculty of Science has created a new function: Resource person in connection with harassment cases. The function is carried out by Suba S. Lindholm, who is currently the deputy head of the PhD school and secretary of the Gender Equality Committee.
A word from the dean
06.February.2025
The plans for DARA
The job posting for a Managing Director is out now, and we expect to have the first fellowship posting in June
A word from the dean
16.January.2025
We are in the beginning of an exciting year
With a new campus in Vejle and a record setting grant for a research academy, our faculty is going to have a big year.
Latest news from the university
Climate
06.June.2025
Become a climate ambassador at SDU
– and put climate on the agenda where you work.
Action plan
04.June.2025
Handleplan
A new action plan strengthens career and competence development at SDU with shared responsibility, strategic direction, and local anchoring.
EPICUR
03.June.2025
Community across Europe
Earlier this week, the University of Southern Denmark hosted the EPICUR Forum 2025 on sustainable transformation.
Summer 2025
03.June.2025
Changes to operations at Technical Services during the summer
Technical Services would like to point out that there may be changes to operations during the summer
FLEKS
02.June.2025
Instructions for flex adjustment on Great Prayer Day
The system thinks that General Prayer Day is still a public holiday, and it is therefore important that you correct your hours in Buanco/FlexIkon. If you have already tried to correct your flex in relation to General Prayer Day. General Prayer Day, please check the instructions below. If you need help, please contact the person responsible for holiday planning in your section/unit.
Rector Portrait
28.May.2025
See the Portrait of Henrik Dam
Yesterday, Thomas Kluge’s portrait of SDU’s former rector, Henrik Dam, was unveiled, making him the latest former SDU rector to be portrayed.
Master’s Degree Reform
27.May.2025
Status of the Master’s Degree Reform at SDU
SDU has now seen the first drafts of the ministerial orders that will implement the reform. The Ministerial Accreditation Order is the first to be submitted for consultation ahead of a meeting in the conciliation committee in June, where the parties will also discuss the universities’ plans for a new master’s degree landscape.
EPICUR
26.May.2025
Tell your students about EPICUR – autumn courses can be applied for in June
As a teacher, you can help your students expand their professional and international horizons through EPICUR. Through the alliance, SDU students have access to a wide range of international courses and activities – taught either online, as blended learning (a combination of online and physical attendance) or with physical presence.
Sustainable
21.May.2025
Why did the grass disappear?
You may have wondered why an excavator recently removed large sections of the lawn at the administration building at SDU in Odense? Here is the explanation.
Sustainable
09.May.2025
Train to Stockholm – a step towards more sustainable work-related trips
Six employees from SDU chose rails over boarding zones and baggage carousels when travelling to a professional event in Sweden – and discovered a climate-friendly travel option with no stress and room for contemplation.
Fioniavej 34, Odense M
18.06.2025
11:15 - 12:15
DIAS Event: 'Healthy People, Healthy Planet: Behavioural Science in Action' by Nikos Ntoumanis
Is behavioural science just common sense? Just another word for “nudging”? Only about individual behaviour change?The answer to all three is no. While common sense relies on intuition and anecdote, behavioural science uses systematic research to uncover how people think, feel, and act—often in ways that are counterintuitive or invisible to us. It examines the roles of unconscious biases, habits, social norms, and environmental cues, and has consistently shown that what “seems obvious” is not always effective. For instance, simply providing information about health or climate issues rarely leads to lasting behaviour change. Instead, strategies such as habit formation, social support, and policy changes that enhance access tend to be more impactful—and often more so than nudging alone. This lecture will explore how behavioural science can support multidisciplinary efforts to improve both human and planetary health. I will share conceptual and methodological contributions, illustrated with examples from past, current, and planned research projects undertaken at DRIVEN (Danish Centre for Motivation and Behaviour Science; https://www.sdu.dk/en/forskning/driven). About Nikos NtoumanisNikos Ntoumanis is Professor of Motivation and DIAS Chair in Health. Originally from Greece, Nikos has spent most of his adult life in the UK and Australia, working in various universities. In 2021, he joined the University of Southern Denmark (SDU), where he established DRIVEN – the Danish Centre for Motivation and Behaviour Science – within the Department of Sport Sciences and Clinical Biomechanics. His research focuses on the personal and contextual factors that foster motivation for sustained behaviour change. His work spans applied research on physical activity and health behaviour change in community and clinical settings, basic research on the regulation of life goals, and both basic and applied research on motivation in educational, workplace, and pro-environmental contexts. Nikos is a Fellow of the American Psychological Association, the British Psychological Society, and the UK’s Academy of Social Sciences.Venue: DIAS Auditorium, Krogene V, SDU OdenseOpen for all - no registration needed
Fioniavej 34, Odense M
25.06.2025
11:15 - 12:15
DIAS Event: 'Life through the hologenomic window' by Tom Gilbert
Biologists have relatively recent realised that no organism is alone – but rather they exist as a tightly interacting community that consists of a host scaffold, and uncountable numbers of associated microbial partners living on, and in it. Given the remarkable range of ways that microbes can affect their hosts, we are starting to realise that it is not possible to fully understand how life works without integrating information from both parts of the relationship. And when done so, we often reach quite different insights, about life in general, but also our own species.About Tom Gilbert Tom Gilbert is Professor of Palaeogenomics at the Globe Institute, University of Copenhagen, and Director of the DNRF Center for Evolutionary Hologenomics. Tom received his BA (Biological Sciences) and DPhil (Molecular Evolution/ancient DNA) from Oxford University, and then spent 2 years at the University of Arizona working on untangling the origin of the HIV-1 epidemic. In 2005 he moved as a Marie Curie Fellow to the University of Copenhagen, where he has been employed ever since in variously the Niels Bohr Institute, Biological Institute, Natural History Museum of Denmark, and since 2019, the Globe Institute. While for most of his career his work studied the genomic basis of evolution of animals and plants, over the past decade his interests have turned to how microbial partners shape this relationship, and what consequences this might have to us.VenueThe DIAS Auditorium, SDU Campus OdenseThis event is open for all. No registration needed.
Fioniavej 34, Odense M
03.09.2025
11:15 - 12:15
DIAS Event: At the Limit: Existential Media, Relational Selves and Technological Futures by Amanda Lagerkvist
“Philosophizing,” argued the existential philosopher, Karl Jaspers (1932) “starts with our situation”. This lecture introduces key concepts, frameworks and figurations in existential media studies by setting out from a moment of interrelated crises in which advanced technologies such as “AI” (artificial intelligence) are hailed as the inevitable solution to all of humanity’s problems. In the digital limit situation (Lagerkvist 2020, 2022)—as the technology is entrusted to be salvaging us or feared to outperform and render us extinct—“the self” is simultaneously encroached from all sides. In a curious way, new “subjects” are meanwhile envisioned to be born inside the models. This raises a series of pressing questions: What conceptions of the self are actually being forged within this powerful socio-technical imaginary? What norms for being human in the world do advanced technologies bring about, challenge or reactivate? And how can we envision selves and technologies relationally as well as within limits, for promoting an existentially sustainable future with machines? About Amanda LagerkvistAmanda Lagerkvist is Professor of media and communication studies, PI of the Uppsala Hub for Digital Existence and guest researcher at the Centre for Multidisciplinary Research on Religion and Society (CRS) at Uppsala University. She has been appointed Core Fellow at the Helsinki Collegium for Advanced Study, The University of Helsinki, for the academic year of 2025-2026. As Wallenberg Academy Fellow (2014-2018) she founded the young field of existential media studies. Her work has spanned the existential dimensions of digital memories, death online and lifeworlds of biometrics. She currently explores intersections of datafication, disability and selfhood; and the ambivalent AI imaginary and its relationship to both futures and endings (with funding from the Bank of Sweden and WASP-HS). In her monograph Existential Media: A Media Theory of the Limit Situation (OUP, 2022) she introduces Karl Jaspers’ existential philosophy of limit situations for media theory. She is the co-editor of Relational Technologies: In Search of the Self Across Datafied Lifeworlds with Dr. Jacek Smolicki (Bloomsbury, Thinking/Media Series) and she is currently under contract for her new monograph Dismedia: Technologies of the Extraordinary Self with The University of Michigan Press.VenueThe DIAS Auditorium, SDU Campus OdenseThis event is open for all. No registration needed.
Registration deadline: 28.08.2025
Campusvej 55, Odense M
05.09.2025
14:00 - 17:00
Inaugural seminar Professor Sören Möller
”Translational biostatistics: From proof to patient and back"
Registration deadline: 28.08.2025
Campusvej 55, Odense M
05.09.2025
14:00 - 17:00
Inaugural seminar Professor Sören Möller
”Translational biostatistics: From proof to patient and back"
Fioniavej 34, Odense M
08.10.2025
11:15 - 12:15
DIAS Event: 'Techno, Art and Music Robots' by Moritz Simon Geist
Moritz Simon Geist is a German artist and robotics engineer, well-known for his wildly viral videos like the "Popcorn Jazz Robot" and the giant drum robot "MR-808.”With a background in electrical engineering and a passion for hands-on sound creation, Geist's work is driven by a desire to interact physically with music.His robotic instruments are crafted using advanced technologies such as 3D printing, CNC milling, and laser cutting and have been shown all around the world.In this talk, Geist will give insight into his art practice, share how he stopped working with human musicians and started working with music robots, and explain why AI music robots will not replace human musicians (soon).About Moritz Simon GeistMoritz Simon Geist is a music producer and researcher working with sound, robotics and algorithms. Beginning his academic career in semiconductor sciences as a PhD student, Geist made a career shift to focus on art and music, where he now merges sound with robotics and algorithms.His approach to electronic music, which involves creating sound through mechanical robots, has earned him international recognition.In 2012, Geist's first work, the "Drum Robot MR-808," went viral, and he has since explored the sound making and producing of electronic music with robots and mechanics as well as releasing many influential and viral works.Want to know more? Click HereVenueThe DIAS Auditorium, SDU Campus OdenseThis event is open for all. No registration needed
Last Updated 15.04.2025