Archive for the ‘PRINCEU’ Category

Who Won the Campus Challenge

Wednesday, April 9th, 2008

All of the schools put together some amazing final projects, but after counting all the legitimate votes, and calculating the judges’ scores, Western Kentucky emerged as our winner.The final vote total was:

Western Kentucky 3669
Brandeis 2807
Sacred Heart 2633
Hofstra 2030
GWU 1083
Princeton 918
UNLV 790
Kansas State 559
Campbellsville 522
Wilmington 245

Each of the judges ranked the projects from 1-10 (1 being the best), so a smaller sum total correlates to a better ranking. Their cumulative scores were:

GWU 7
Western Kentucky 10
UNLV 13
Wilmington 17
Sacred Heart 21
Princeton 24
Cambellsville 26
Brandeis 27
Kansas State 37
Hofstra 38

Additionally, here is what the judges had to say about the projects (in no particular order):

Hofstra did a good job showing the struggles 1 billion people face on a daily basis around the world. Oftentimes it is easier for people to be impacted by a visual rather than a statistic - Great job showing everything from living conditions to limited food resources.

Western Kentucky showed hustle and energy and engaged the entire community which was impressive. Western Kentucky was savvy and the fact that they were able to get, for example, 160 people to send letters in support of the Education For All Act, showed a lot of tangible advocacy.

Kansas State did a great job reaching out to local media to spread more awareness.

The vigil was very powerful visual.

Campbellsville did a great job participating in a variety events that would reach different audiences. It is amazing how many activities you were able to host and be a part of. I hope the ONE group will continue to be involved in the campus and Campbellsville communities.

The fact that the UNLV students understood it was important both to praise a Senator supporting them and to push a Senator who was not was good, smart lobbying. Also, we can’t beat poverty on our own, and you did the best job of pulling other groups into the fight against poverty and got them to use their specific skills and interests to further the cause.

Brandeis - I loved the theme. The catchy theme was a great way to get people’s attention.

GWU did a great job demonstrating how cheap medications are for treatable diseases, it is important for people to understand something tangible like the cost of a pill. The petition delivery was the type of stunt that gets attention and sticks in people’s memories. Grade A advocacy right there.

Princeton did an amazing job inundating the campus with ONE materials the night before your campus event. I am glad you were able to make students comfortable enough to call their congressional members.

Wilmington - Engaging the local community is crucial. Hopefully you can start to build a sustainable group that bridges the campus and the community.

SHU did a great job with the playground and it was inspiring how they all were able to connect the local community to the greater global problem.

The Voting Issues

Friday, April 4th, 2008

Last night some overeager folks started running bots on the final voting system, giving thousands of votes to Princeton and UNLV.

We’ve put up a use verification to stop the flow of fraudulent votes and are looking into the fairest way to fix this kerfuffle.

The Top 10

Wednesday, February 20th, 2008

After almost 5 months of open competition, we’re now narrowing the competition down to the top ten schools:

  1. Sacred Heart University
  2. University of Nevada, Las Vegas
  3. Brandeis University
  4. Western Kentucky University
  5. Princeton University
  6. Wilmington College, Wilmington, Ohio
  7. Kansas State University
  8. George Washington University
  9. Hofstra University
  10. Campbellsville University

Each school will receive a $1,000 grant to create their own poverty advocacy program.

Thank you all for waiting patiently while we processed points. We know that the leader board might shift around a little, but at the point that we cut off the competition (Monday) these were the schools that made the cut for the final 10.

This doesn’t mean that the competition is over for everyone else. If you didn’t make the top ten, you can still create you very own advocacy project and submit it for a chance at a “wild card” spot. In late March when we all vote for the final winner, we’ll include the wild card entry in with the top 10 schools for voting.

Though the competition of the Campus Challenge is narrowing, the larger competition against extreme poverty is far from over. We’ve got lots of work to do, and it is crucial that we all continue to do the work we have done during the campus challenge, even if the fun and games are coming to a close.

On Fire

Monday, February 18th, 2008

A handful of schools went all out in a final recruitment drive help clench a spot in the top ten. When I looked up the numbers I was blown away by the lengths the top 4 recruiters went in the final week.

Western Kentucky – 483
Brandeis – 256
Kansas State – 129
Princeton – 91

Normally you would think that recruiting over 250 people in a single week would be good enough to win the weekly recruitment challenge, but not so.  Western Kentucky is on fire, and they have been for about a month now. The question is: can they keep it up long enough to win it all?

Dirty Picture of the Week

Monday, January 28th, 2008

Although the action is from last semester, Princeton just uploaded a few great pictures from their PEPFAR action, we decided that one of their “dirty laundry” pictures deserved the nod for picture of the week.

Some other great photos:

The Clemson Tiger in a ONE Vote ‘08 shirt:

Student at Missouri talking to Sen. Claire McCaskill and giving her a custom made ONE Mizzou shirt:

Understand how the ONE Campus Challenge works by reviewing the rules. All participation in the challenge is subject to the terms and conditions in the rules.