Student OpEd Contest

Open to all enrolled college students nationwide and seeks to engage America’s greatest rising minds to think about and articulate solutions to some of the nation’s most pressing challenges.

$5,000

Grand Prize

Nov 15, 2024

Entry Deadline

900 words

Article Limit

Problem Solvers OpEd Contest

The Alliance for Innovation and Infrastructure (Aii) is excited to announce a fall 2024 scholarship for college students. The contest is open to all enrolled college students nationwide and seeks to engage America’s greatest rising minds to think about and articulate solutions to some of the nation’s most pressing challenges.

Aii presents students with an essay prompt and invites students to reflect deeply and conduct their own research. To enter the contest, students will write a well-reasoned and well-supported opinion column (like an OpEd) and submit it to a local, state, or national publication of your choosing. Once you’ve done so, upload a hyperlink to the published article or send in proof of a good faith effort to get your article placed.

Who is Aii?

The Alliance for Innovation and Infrastructure (Aii) is the only national public policy think tank dedicated solely to infrastructure. Aii is a nonpartisan, independent research and educational organization with a mission to help foster innovative solutions to current and future infrastructure challenges. An innovative think tank, Aii explores the intersection of economics, law, and public policy in the areas of climate, damage prevention, energy, infrastructure, innovation, technology, and transportation. The Alliance consists of two non-profits, the National Infrastructure Safety Foundation (NISF) 501(c)(4) and the Public Institute for Facility Safety (PIFS) 501(c)(3). Both non-profits consist of volunteer boards of directors who legally govern the Alliance. These boards also work in conjunction with the Alliance’s own volunteer Advisory Council.

Learn

 

This is the second annual scholarship contest run by Aii. Education has always been integral to what we do, and we believe this is an outgrowth of that vision. We challenge students to read and engage with our dynamic research and reports to arrive at their own original arguments. Not only will they learn in the process, but they will advance the learning process by showcasing their ideas for others.

Compete

 

We are eager for students to take advantage of this opportunity to raise their voice and compete in the nationwide marketplace of ideas. By using an OpEd style contest, we are encouraging students to make a difference, speak up, and show their local policymakers and the country how we can leverage innovation and existing infrastructure to solve problems.

Opportunity

 

This contest not only provides students an opportunity to compete against their peers, but the chance to earn scholarship funds. One finalist will be named and their work promoted, with 1st place earning $5,000 or more. Select runner-ups may also have their work highlighted to our nationwide audience of industry leaders and policymakers.

Choose Your OpEd Topic

Closely read the following prompt. Read Aii reference material from “Selected Sources” at the bottom of this page and incorporate relevant information in your own original OpEd article. Articles must be written in English only and should not exceed 900 words in length. The audience and tone should be toward the general public, or specific regional audience of a given publication.

To enter the contest, students must write a well-reasoned and well-supported opinion column (or an OpEd) and submit it to a local, state, or national publication of your choosing. Once you’ve done so, upload a hyperlink to the published article or send in proof of a good faith effort to get your article placed. The article should address the prompt, but be tailored to the style and type of publication you submit to. You may include to editors when you submit that it is an essay contest, or you can simply pitch as an opinion column or OpEd. Depending on the region, students may have more success if they pick a notable, local, or newsworthy topic (e.g., a local election, current event, or recent incident) to frame their article around. For advice and help pitching or for contest clarifications, you may reach out to Benjamin Dierker at aiinonprofitorg@gmail.com.

An Action Plan

The future demands power! We will need more energy to meet the needs of a growing and dynamic economy. Much of the energy we consume is in the form of electricity, but much of the heavy industrial world uses heat and other forms of energy. Assuming we need to both increase total energy capacity and reduce the impact of power generation, how can we decarbonize heavy industry? This prompt calls for strategic thinking – recognizing that certain infrastructure in place now that may need to be replaced, while other assets rely on new infrastructure like transmission lines, batteries, and more. Cast your vision, but ensure you account for the challenges along the way. Write an OpEd up to 900 words.

Eligibility

• This contest is open to all currently enrolled college students across the United States. Students will have until November 15 to write out a well-sourced, original argument on one prompt and attempt to place it in a newspaper or similar publication.

• Open to all enrolled college students, including graduate students

• One entry per student.

• Contest will run from September 1 to November 15. Entries must be made by 11:59pm ET on Friday, November 15.

(Students are encouraged to get started as soon as they can, but Aii will only evaluate submissions made during this period)

Rules

• The article must clearly address the prompt, but may be general or specific in its application to a certain locality or current event. The article should not state or restate the prompt – from the newspaper’s perspective, they are just receiving an opinion submission, but Aii is encouraging students to think through critical issues and think about innovation and infrastructure in a practical and impactful way.

• Qualifying articles must cite Aii work in text or hyperlink as part of a well-researched article.

• Articles must be pitched to a local, state, or national publication. Submissions to Aii must be either the final published article link to a live publication website or an email with proof of submission and word document of article draft.

• Abide by any publication requirements such as submission type (in body of email or as attachment), word count, hyperlinks or written sources, etc. The Aii contest prompts above are contest guidelines, but specific publication requirements will impact students’ ability to place articles for publication.

Scholarships

 

Winning Potential: $5,000 (or more)

 

Winners will be selected by a judging committee assembled by Aii and will evaluate originality of argument, incorporation of innovation, and leveraging of existing infrastructure. Winning submissions will be promoted by Aii and certain articles may be published at Aii.org. Contest deadline is 11:59pm ET on Friday, November 15.

Selected Sources

Read through Aii resources and cite them in your OpEd.