USAID Ensures More Students Worldwide
Ideate for Social Impact
By Anh-Thi Le, DIL Program Coordinator
The Big Ideas@Berkeley contest provides funding, encouragement, and yearlong support to interdisciplinary
teams of undergraduate and graduate students who seek to create social impact. The program started in
2006, as a means to engage Berkeley students in social entrepreneurship. It has always offered prizes in
multiple categories, to address a range of social and economic challenges.
This year, with support from the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), Big Ideas expanded the
number of students and campuses eligible to participate. Through a partnership with USAID’s Higher
Education Solutions Network (HESN) and the Development Impact Lab (DIL), the program has launched three
new “open” contest categories: Promoting Human Rights, Global Poverty Alleviation and Open Data.
By the numbers: The 2013-2014 Competition
12 universities, 187 teams, 600
students, 75 majors
45 non-UCB HESN teams
56 finalist teams, 7 from HESN
campuses
These categories elicited active student engagement from 12 different
universities, with 25 percent of proposals coming from HESN partners,
including Duke University, the College of William and Mary, Texas A&M
University, and Makerere University in Uganda.
“The HESN contribution has significantly enriched the Big Ideas
ecosystem,” said Phillip Denny, Manager of Big Ideas@Berkeley. “The
influx of bright students was reflected not only in the application pool but also through the Big Ideas Grand
Prize Pitch Day and in the People’s Choice Video Contest.”
On the annual Grand Prize Pitch Day, Texas A&M University’s Wenjuan
Chen placed first in the Global Impact Category for her project, Promoting
Yogurt to Improve Child Nutrition in Far-Western Nepal, which aims to
promote the feeding of safely prepared yogurt to children between 6
months and 5 years of age in households through Nepal.
Grand Prize winner Wenjuan Chen with her
mentor George Scharffenberger.
“The HESN contribution
has significantly enriched
the Big Ideas ecosystem”
Additionally, in an effort to generate more public awareness about this year’s
projects, Big Ideas launched its first ever People’s Choice Video contest.
Teams were asked to post a short video sharing their “big ideas,” and the
public voted for the top innovative solution to a pressing social problem.
2013’s People’s Choice Video award went to the College of William and
Mary’s Elena van den Berg for “The Recreation House,” a center for the
development of teenagers and orphans in Vidin, Bulgaria. Van den Berg also
won third place in the Promoting Human Rights category.
There will be new HESN categories in the 2014-2015 contest, which will draw
more innovations from the student community. Visit bigideas.berkeley.edu to learn more about the Big Ideas
contest, or access the USAID-sponsored Big Ideas Toolkit to start your own contest.
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