High school students compete for $36K in prizes at eighth annual Dare to Dream Competition
More than a dozen out of 50 teams from regional high schools advanced to the final round in the eighth annual on March 2 at the Shawnee State University Kricker Innovation Hub.
Teams from Russel, Minford, Portsmouth, Green and Tri-State STEM+M were among 13 entrants that competed for $36,000 in prizes this year. The winning team, Locked and Loaded Game Birds from Russell High School, won $6,450 for their pitch of all-inclusive, family friendly hunting experiences.
"These students put so much time and effort into this, particularly this year with the challenges of virtual learning,鈥 said Melissa Wilburn, business and marketing teacher at the Russell Area Technology Center. 鈥淭his is a wonderful way to make a difference in students鈥 lives and help them 鈥榩ut feet with their faith鈥 and take action. This is the best thing my students do, and I look forward to working with Dare to Dream for many years to come.鈥
The TechGROWTH Ohio-sponsored competition encourages high school students in the tri-state area to pitch new enterprise ideas, with cash awards for the best pitches. The event teaches high schoolers to collaborate over an innovative idea and present persuasively before an audience and judges. Job-seeking and college-bound students can use this experience for their applications. The program also shows students that they have opportunities in their hometowns, said competition co-founder Mike Thompson, executive-in-residence at TechGROWTH Ohio.
鈥淭his competition is an excellent model for an entirely community-supported avenue for young adults on the cusp of entering the workforce or higher education to tackle real-world social issues and innovate their way toward successful resolution,鈥 said Faith Knutsen, co-founder of the program and director of Social Innovation and Entrepreneurship at 51社区鈥檚 Voinovich School of Leadership and Public Affairs.
Among this year鈥檚 prizes were the ongoing William Beale Award for innovation in carbon-footprint reduction. The award provides $1,000 to contestants with the most compelling ideas for making the world more livable for future generations. The annual award honors Knutsen鈥檚 father, William Beale, a former 51社区 mechanical engineering professor who invented the free-piston Stirling engine and founded Sunpower, Inc.
New this year was the Glazer Award, provided by the estate of the late John Glazer, founding director of TechGROWTH Ohio and subsequently the Voinovich School鈥檚 Senior Executive in Residence for Strategic Development.
鈥淏oth men were deeply admiring of the strength and resilience of regional rural youth,鈥 Knutsen said. 鈥淭hey were themselves raised in less-privileged backgrounds and achieved professional and personal success. I would only hope that the Dare to Dream competitors, as indicated by the title, dare to expand their horizons and to dream of solutions for our local and global future.鈥
Along with TechGROWTH Ohio, this year鈥檚 program was sponsored by the Appalachian Regional Commission, Glockner Automotive, Steve Moore, Kentucky Farmer鈥檚 Bank, William Burke and OSCO Industries, John Stewart, Tom Wolf and McDonald鈥檚, SFR Restaurant Group, Shawnee State University, Lawrence Economic Development Council and Dr. Bill Dingus, Triple J鈥檚 Restaurant Group, MPH Hotels and Kindred Communications.
The Voinovich School is a key player in a region-wide entrepreneurial ecosystem that encourages, supports, engages, professionally coaches, and provides access to funding for entrepreneurs of all ages and stages, from high-schoolers to mission-driven entrepreneurs in the for-profit and non-profit sectors to high-tech startups.
鈥淭here is no wrong door for budding entrepreneurs of any age,鈥 said Knutsen, encouraging any entrepreneur to explore the many avenues for assistance available in the region, including the Voinovich School.
鈥淭he platform that you generously support creates a pipeline,鈥 Ben Eng, executive director of the iCenter and an associate professor at Marshall University, told the sponsors. 鈥淎 pipeline of what Appalachia needs most 鈥 innovators and entrepreneurs 鈥 who will better the way we live our lives. A pipeline to universities like Marshall, Shawnee and 51社区 to help continue to build on the momentum and the work started with this competition. And a pipeline to a better future for us all.鈥