Student Teams Compete at 2nd Annual Big Ideas Pitch Day

Having nurtured their “big ideas” since September, six of the most innovative finalist teams in the Big Ideas@Berkeley contest presented their projects to a panel of distinguished judges at the Big Ideas Grand Prize Pitch Day on April 25, 2013.

By: Luis Flores

Having nurtured their “big ideas” since September, six of the most innovative finalist teams in the Big Ideas@Berkeley contest presented their projects to a panel of distinguished judges at the Big Ideas Grand Prize Pitch Day on April 25, 2013. Pitch Day contestants had the opportunity to win up to $5,000 in prize money to support their project.  Winning teams will add their Pitch Day prizes to awards in their respective Big Ideas contest categories.

Judges awarded the Grand Prize in the Global Impact Pitch Round to The Pachamama Project, the big idea of Rebecca Peters, Lindsey Dreizler, and Jessica Kretch. Their initiative promotes gender equity, education, and access to clean water and sanitation in Bolivia while also engaging the stigma around menstruation.

The Grand Prize in the Campus and Community Impact Pitch Round went to Cashify, pitched in an energetic presentation by undergraduates Shuonan Chen, Justin Chu, and Virgina Chung. Their big idea is to improve financial literacy, starting on the Berkeley campus.  Cashify uses interactive online games that engage students in what the team calls “Edu-tainment” while connecting students to on-campus financial resources. “The pitch gave us the opportunity to personalize our project… to give it a heart, a soul, and enthusiasm,” explained Chen.

Finalist teams were also awarded 2nd and 3rd place prizes. In the Global Impact Pitch Round, Emmunify, an innovative project to embed immunization records in electronically readable tags placed on phones in rural northern India, took the 2nd place prize. The 3rd place prize went to Building a Youth Leadership Association in Rabinal, Guatemala, for their project that will empower indigenous teenagers in Guatemala to form their own Youth Leadership Association.

In the Campus and Community Impact category, AMASS Media was awarded 2nd place. Their project will use a web interface to connect non-profit and small social impact organizations with early career videographers to increase the impact of organizations while building the portfolios of young videographers. The 3rd place winners behind the UC Berkeley Science Shop similarly offer non-profits, businesses, and local government free or low-cost access to student scientific research on campus—allowing students to impact social change through their on-campus research.

The six teams invited to pitch their ideas to judges and the campus community were selected based on on the high scores their written proposals received. The Pitch Day forum not only opens opportunities for additional funding to top contestants, but also gives teams the chance to present their ideas in a personal and visually engaging format—a useful skill for social venture start-ups.

“Pitching is essential in any entrepreneurial venue,” explained John Chang of AMASS Media. “You have to know how to talk about your project!” Chang stressed the importance of the Big Ideas mentors in guiding their team through the process of translating their written proposal into an engaging public presentation. Chang feels that it is these types of mentorship and experiences that put Berkeley on the cutting edge of social innovation.

The teams also benefited from the engagement with the panel of expert judges in Q&A sessions that followed each pitch. “The judges’ questions challenged us with new perspectives… I appreciated that,“ said Chen.

Cashify team members Chen, Chu, and Chung nervously awaited the judges’ decision after their pitch, which was twice interrupted by technical glitches. “We have presented in business classes and corporate spaces… [but] this was more realistic,” the team recalled. “It’s harder when you’re emotionally attached!”

2013 Pitch Day Winners:
Campus and Community Impact Round
Judges: Andrik Cardenas, Director of Operations, Center for Nonprofit and Public Leadership, Haas School of Business; Andrew Rudd, Andrew and Virginia Rudd Foundation; Christian Teeter, Chief of Staff, Office of the Vice Provost for Teaching, Learning, Academic Planning, UC Berkeley
1st Place: Cashify, a Social Platform and Business Model for Financial Literacy
Team Members: Shuonan Chen, Justin Chu, Virginia Chung
2nd Place: AMASS Media– Democratizing Access to Multimedia Services
Team Members: John Chang, Carolyn Kao, Dominick Ng, Yang Wang, Clayton Yan, Hannah Yang
3rd Place: The U.C. Berkeley Science Shop: Connecting Communities to University Research
Team Members: Karen Andrade, Erik Behar, Sushma Bhatia, Hekia Bodwitch, Melissa Eitzel, Jennifer Palomino, Leah Rubin
Global Impact Round
Judges: Marion Adney, AAAS Science and Technology Fellow; Jeff Burton, Executive Director of Skydeck, UC Berkeley; Wilfred Chung, President and CEO of the Philomathia Foundation; David Ferguson, Deputy Director, Office of Science and Technology, USAID; Braden Penhoet, Executive Director for Innovation and Business Development, Office of the Vice Chancellor of Research, UC Berkeley
1st Place: The Pachamama Project
Team Members: Rebecca Peters, Lindsey Dreizler, Jessica Kretch
2nd Place: Emmunify
Team Members: Sanat Kamal Bahl, Erik Krogh-Jespersen, Anandamoy Sen, Jessica Watterson
3rd Place: Building a Youth Leadership Association in Rabinal, Guatemala
Team Members: Michael Bakal, Kira Levy, Kimberly Vinall

Finalists Set to Compete in the Big Ideas Grand Prize Pitch Day

Six of the most innovative projects in the 2012-13 Big Ideas@Berkeley contest have been selected to present their projects to a panel of judges and the campus community at the Big Ideas Pitch Day Grand Prize.

Six of the most innovative projects in the 2012-13 Big Ideas@Berkeley contest have been selected to present their projects to a panel of judges and the campus community at the Big Ideas Pitch Day Grand Prize. Winning teams will secure additional funding for their projects. The annual Pitch Day event, held in Blum Hall on April 25th from 2-5pm, will feature presentations by multidisciplinary groups of undergraduate and graduate teams addressing social problems in two categories: Campus & Community Impact and Global Impact.

“Being selected for Pitch Day is a huge honor,” said Michael Bakal, a member of the Building Youth Leadership in Rabinal team that has been named a Pitch Day finalist. “Having the opportunity to share the stories and aspirations of the youth we work with in Guatemala shows that the world is not indifferent to their destiny, and that there are people and institutions out there who believe in young people’s capacity to better their communities and our world. Big Ideas is helping us transform potential into action!” Michael added.

Presenting teams will take the stage for a five-minute project pitch followed by a question and answer session. The 1st place team will receive $5,000, the 2nd place team will receive $3,000, and the 3rd place team will receive $1,000. All these projects remain in the running for prizes in one of Big Ideas’ nine contest categories, for which the winners will be announced later this month.

The teams presenting under the Campus & Community Impact category are:
UC Berkeley Science Shop: Developed by a group of undergraduates from College of Natural Resources and a Haas MBA, the UC Berkeley Science Shop will provide community non-profits, small businesses, and local government offices free or low-cost access to student scientific research on campus. The Berkeley Science Shop would provide Berkeley students the opportunity to contribute to the welfare of their communities through their research.
AMASS Media: The idea of an interdisciplinary team of undergraduates in Computer Science, Business Administration, and Film Studies, AMASS Media seeks to expand access to quality multimedia services for social impact organizations. This project connects student early-career videographers looking to build their portfolios with community non-profit organizations looking for quality multimedia services.
Cashify, A Social Platform and Business Model for Financial Literacy: The undergraduate team behind Cashify has developed a model for financial education that uses interactive online games to empower students by providing the necessarily knowledge and resources to make sound financial decisions. Students using Cashify would navigate college life as a virtual financial adventure—students would track their own personal finances, participate in games that teach essential financial concepts, and interact with others. Through this reward-driven interactive financial adventure, Cashify aims to spread financial awareness in the Berkeley campus and beyond.

The teams presenting under the Global Impact category are:
Building a Youth Leadership Association in Rabinal, Guatemala: This team, composed of graduate students in the School of Public Health, School of Education, and medicine, seeks to empower indigenous teenagers in Rabinal, Guatemala, to design and implement solutions to their community’s public health problems. This project builds on the work of team member Michael Bakal’s organization, Voces y Manos (Voices and Hands), which sought to improve community health though the provision of medical care. This project is a response to community feedback, which revealed that communities wanted to take control over their own health. After training a group of indigenous teenage leaders, this project will give the Youth Leadership Association control over a $4,000 budget to implement public health solutions in their community.
The Pachamama Project: Led by a team of graduate and undergraduate students from College of Natural Resources, the College of Engineering, and the Environmental Science, Policy, and Management Department, this project will work toward the realization of human rights through gender equity, education, and access to clean water and sanitation in Cochabamba, Bolivia. The Pachamama Project will use education initiatives to engage with the stigma surrounding female reproductive health and the hygienic management of menstruation. While working toward improving the health of women in Bolivia, the Pachamama Project will also engage in community discussions on human rights to water, education, and gender equity.
Emmunify: Graduate students at Haas, the School of Public Health, and the School of Information are addressing the disproportionate lack of immunizations that reach rural populations in India. Emmunify is a non-profit social venture that enables rural villagers to carry an electronic medical record containing their child’s immunization history on an electronically readable tag laced on their phone. Emmunify would allow for rural families to be reminded of immunization appointments via SMS text and voice messages. By dramatically simplifying the immunization process for rural villagers and health workers through technology, Emmunify has the potential to decrease the number of preventable child deaths in rural India.

The Big Ideas People’s Choice Video Award, worth $2,500, will also be announced at the Pitch Day event. This contest invited all Big Ideas finalists to submit a video about their project, giving the public an opportunity to vote for their favorite project video. Eighteen videos are currently featured on the Big Ideas facebook page.

Watch the live Pitch Day webcast at http://ustre.am/Xm9j.

Big Ideas@Berkeley, IT for Society Poster Session: April 10, 2013

On Wednesday April 10th, from 2-4pm, Big Ideas@Berkeley will hold its annual “Information Technology for Society” poster session in B100 Blum Hall on the UC Berkeley campus.

On Wednesday April 10th, from 2-4pm, Big Ideas@Berkeley will hold its annual “Information Technology for Society” poster session in B100 Blum Hall on the UC Berkeley campus.

All nine finalists in the IT for Society category will be in attendance, to discuss their innovative projects and answer questions from judges and the public. The IT for Society contest category, sponsored by the Rudd Family Foundation and the Center for Information Technology Research in the Interest of Society (CITRIS), supports student projects with the potential to channel information technology to address a broad range of social issues—including public health, democratic governance, transportation, and disaster response, among others. The upcoming poster session will allow teams to share their projects, which have already demonstrated the capacity of IT in addressing major societal challenges.
Big Ideas@Berkeley is an annual innovation contest aimed at providing funding, support, and encouragement to interdisciplinary teams of UC undergraduate and graduate students who have “big ideas.”

The projects in the 2013 Information Technology for Society category are:
Access (UC Berkeley) | Access will innovate a financially sustainable business model that provides free mobile phones, subscriptions and SMS literacy curricula to the world’s illiterate poor. They plan on harnessing corporate interest at the bottom of the economic pyramid as an untapped market to finance this movement.
Facilitating Independence for Photo Capturing, Browsing, and Sharing for Blind People (UC Santa Cruz) | This big idea is to facilitate independence for blind people in capturing, organizing, browsing, and sharing photos using an iPhone.
FuturePress—Open reading, writing, and collaboration for enhanced ebooks (UC Berkeley) | Electronic books, content sharing, and collaborative authoring have the potential to transform education and community knowledge building, but proprietary platforms and limited authoring tools are standing in the way. FuturePress seeks to change this by building an open-source, cross-platform ebook reader and a web-based collaborative authoring tool.
Health in the Cloud (UC Berkeley) | Health in the Cloud will build an easy-to-use, but comprehensive, platform for the global health community to collect, manage, and analyze diagnostic data. Emphasis will be placed on providing and standardizing powerful techniques for data visualization, co-location of data, and meta-analysis, which they believe is the future of data mining and healthcare.
Low-Cost Utility-Driven Guardian Robot for Older Persons Living Alone (UC Santa Cruz) | This proposal aims to produce a robot that acts as a guardian for older persons living independently that is low cost, low maintenance, unobtrusive, and gives the family peace of mind that their loved one is safe.
m3d (Mass Minable Medical Data) (UC Berkeley) | m3d is the “Google for Healthcare” —an intuitive and fast search engine for clinical and biomedical research.
ParkExperienceMap (UC Berkeley) | To survive, California’s National Parks must become more relevant to people of diverse cultural backgrounds. Drawing on research about underserved populations and parks, ParkExperienceMap, in partnership with the national Park Service, proposes to implement an online participatory mapping system for creating park maps that is tailored to underserved audiences.
Science Foundary: A Series on How Scientists Change the World (UC Berkeley) | The Science Foundary wants to inspire the next generation of innovators. Starting with Berkeley’s nine Nobel Laureates, they aim to film a series of short “Science for Everyone” videos explaining their prizewinning work to spark the young minds of future scientists.
Small, Low-Cost Unmanned Aerial Vehicles for CAL FIRE Reconnaissance (UC Merced) | The Sacramento firefighters memorial has over 1,100 fallen heroes, and UC Merced students have developed a way to improve firefighter safety. While combating wildfires, information is key; therefore, this big idea envisions a cheap way to continuously update CAL FIRE with small, unmanned aerial vehicles.

For additional information on Big Ideas@Berkeley, or the IT for Society poster session please contact bigideas@berkeley.edu or visit our website at bigideascontest.org

Big Ideas@Berkeley Project Mentors: Cultivating Student Ideas

Behind nearly every student seeking up to $300,000 in seed funding is a project mentor, proud of them yet anxiously awaiting behind the scenes to hear the judges’ decision.

With final project proposals submitted to the Big Ideas@Berkeley contest, student teams are now playing the waiting game. Thankfully, they are not alone. Behind nearly every student seeking up to $300,000 in seed funding is a project mentor, proud of them yet anxiously awaiting behind the scenes to hear the judges’ decision.

NextDrop Founder, Anu Sridharan, Featured on Berkeley’s Wall of Fame

Almost everyone in urban India has a cell phone, but few have access to running water. NextDrop, winner of the 2011 Big Ideas@Berkeley contest, has a simple solution.

Almost everyone in urban India has a cell phone, but few have access to running water. NextDrop, winner of the 2011 Big Ideas@Berkeley contest, has a simple solution. The Wall of Fame welcomes its cofounder Anu Sridharan ’09, M.S. ’10 as the last, and youngest, alumna celebrating Women’s History Month.

Big Ideas Info Session Encourages Students to Pursue Their Passion

“It all starts from one idea,” said Alejandro Velez during the first informational session for the Big Ideas@Berkeley contest.

by Luis Flores

“It all starts from one idea,” said Alejandro Velez during the first informational session for the Big Ideas@Berkeley contest. For Velez and his partner Nikhil Arora, that idea came from a lecture with professor Alan Ross. Just three years later, their one idea can be found on the shelves of over 300 Whole Foods stores across the country.

BTTR Founders, Alejandro Velez and Nikhil Aurora

Velez and Arora, winners in the 2009 Big Ideas contest, built up their idea to grow mushrooms from used coffee waste into a venture with over 30 employees. Their company, called Back to the Roots (BTTR), promotes urban farming and food consciousness with “grow-your-own” mushroom kits that allow customers to farm gourmet mushrooms sustainably and from home.

“We want to promote the idea that you can learn more about where your food comes from,” said BTTR Executive Coordinator Jared Abbott, “the idea that you can grow your own food even if you don’t have a big backyard.” Social entrepreneurship, Velez later explained to an audience of potential contest participants, doesn’t start with large firms but with big ideas. BTTR is set to collect, divert, and reuse 3.6 million pounds of used coffee grounds this year.

The story of BTTR was one of a simple idea, passionately and creatively pursued. From their first experiments growing buckets of gourmet mushrooms in the basement of a fraternity house to their bold decision to walk into Chez Panisse to get Alice Waters to comment on their mushrooms, Velez and Arora have fueled their idea with excitement and vision.

The BTTR story resonated with students in the audience like Elise Luc, who was inspired by the journey of growing an idea. “I was really inspired by Alejandro’s story,” she said. Luc found it encouraging that social concerns over urban farming and sustainability could grow to become a substantial venture.

This information session was the first of numerous resources designed to guide students with ideas through the Big Ideas@Berkeley proposal writing process. In addition to three information sessions, Big Ideas is also hosting two pre-proposal writing and budgeting workshops (dates posted on the Big Ideas website).

Scheduled for September 18, the next Big Ideas info session will feature 2008 Big Ideas winner Dr. Laura E. Stachel, co-founder of WE Care Solar. Dr. Stachel’s idea for a “solar suitcase” makes essential hospital equipment available to maternal clinics in Nigeria and has already reduced maternal mortality by 70 percent at one hospital. Having just won the “Saving Lives at Birth Challenge” grant from the Gates Foundation, Dr. Stachel’s story will illustrate the far-reaching potential of one idea. The event will be held in 102 Wurster Hall at 6pm.

The Big Ideas@Berkeley Contest Is Open!

The Big Ideas@Berkeley contest is now underway — offering $300,000 to help you turn your idea into reality.

Believe in the Power of Your Ideas!

Calling all Cal Students!   Dust off the drawing board and prepare to think big!   The Big Ideas@Berkeley contest is now underway — offering $300,000 to help you turn your idea into reality.

Now in its seventh year, Big Ideas@Berkeley gives students the opportunity to channel their passion for social change into creative and pragmatic solutions. The 2012/13 contest will include new categories and offer more workshops and mentorship opportunities. Both undergraduate and graduate students are encouraged submit proposals in one of the following categories:

    • Global Poverty Alleviation
    • Creative Expression for Social Justice
    • Clean & Sustainable Energy Alternatives*
    • Financial Literacy*
    • Improving Student Life
    • Information Technology for Society
    • Maternal & Child Health*
    • Promoting Human Rights*
    • Scaling up Big Ideas

(*New Category in 2012-2013)

As past participants know, Big Ideas is more than a contest; it’s an entire ecosystem designed to provide funding, encouragement and advice to Berkeley students. In addition to the chance to attend writing and budget workshops, applicants are matched with mentors from social enterprises, industry, and non-profits – who are eager to help students develop their ideas.

With three info sessions (9/5, 9/18, & 10/4) and two workshops (9/26 & 10/18) Big Ideas is designed to support students from all parts of campus. “I greatly appreciate the resources Big Ideas devotes to students throughout this process because I did not have much experience writing proposals… I felt I had support all along the way,” said Diana Pascual Alonzo, whose project Youth Leadership Now won the Creative Expression category in 2011.

The Big Ideas Contest officially opened on September 4th, 2012.  Pre-proposal applications are due by November 6, 2012.   For more information about rules, categories, resources, funding, and contact information, please visit the Big Ideas website at http://bigideascontest.org.

EMS Shirati: Cal Students Address Maternal Health in Rural Tanzania

EMS Shirati aims to reduce the maternal death rate with the MedBike—an innovative, rugged motorcycle that will safely and rapidly transport patients to the hospital.

Author: Javier Kordi

In the Rorya region of Tanzania, there is one doctor for every 30,000 people—the near equivalent of a single doctor for the entire UC Berkeley student population. With this kind of ratio, the delivery of emergency medical services to surrounding villages is not an easy task. The maternal mortality rate in this region is among the highest in the world—529 deaths for every 100,000 live births, which is 32 percent higher than the world average, according to the World Health Organization. Due to a lack of infrastructure for emergency transportation, mothers experiencing complications during or after childbirth have no way of receiving critical care.Two years ago, as a Global Poverty and Practice Minor fellow, Nicholas Hu and his colleague Sara Adelman traveled to Tanzania’s Rorya region, where they witnessed the dire consequences of this situation first-hand.

Working in the Shirati KMT Hospital, Nicholas recalls the story of a woman who experienced post-partum hemorrhaging (excessive bleeding after child birth) in a rural village. Although the situation seemed bleak, serendipity would save her life. A doctor who happened to be passing the village in a hospital car on outreach rounds picked her up and safely drove her to the hospital.

“Without the passing car, there was no way she could have survived,” Hu said. Out of this experience grew Hu and Adelman’s “big idea”to establish a new form of emergency medical service in Shirati, to ensure that no one is left stranded.

EMS Shirati, which won second place in this year’s BigIdeas@Berkeley Global Poverty Alleviation category, aims to reduce the maternal death rate with the MedBike—an innovative, rugged motorcycle that will safely and rapidly transport patients to the hospital. To acquire the bikes, team member Alejandro LaRiviere established a partnership with manufacturer eRanger.

This motorcycle comes equipped with heavy suspension, a built-in power generator (for cell phone charging & tire compression), and a modified sidecar with a medical stretcher. Far more fuel efficient and better able to transverse the rugged terrain than a standard ambulance, the MedBike promises to radically transform the medical situation in Rorya. In a similar project in neighboring Malawi, the MedBike decreased the maternal mortality rate by 60 percent. Hu hopes the funding from Big Ideas will give his pilot project the momentum it needs to have a similar impact.

Aside from the prize money, the Big Ideas competition was itself a journey of growth and discovery. For the past few months, teams were paired with mentors to help nurture their ideas into project proposals. Team member Yulia Zektser explains how their mentor, Rachel Yeager, offered professional insights that helped maximize the practicality and functionality of the project. While they had initially planned to implement a text messaging system between MedBikes and the hospital, this mode of communication proved impractical. Following the advice of Dr. Chirangi in Tanzania, EMS Shirati decided to use a call system instead to relay patient history, vitals, location, and all other critical information to the hospital.
After purchasing their first MedBike with the Big Ideas grant, the team’s idea will become a reality. In the future, Hu hopes that enthusiasm and support for the project will result in Shirati KMT using the MedBike for all emergency situations. The hope for the communities of Shirati is that surviving a maternal complication will not be dependent on serendipity, but rather on the work and collaboration of EMS Shirati, traditional birth attendants, and the district hospital.