Announcing the 2021 Catalyst Conference Award Winners!
GOA’s sixth annual Catalyst Conference brought over 400 high school students from around the world to an online conference and exhibition of student-driven action research projects. We are thrilled to highlight several student projects who earned conference awards.
The Catalyst Conference Celebrates Student Capstone Projects
The event is the culmination of a two-part learning process: part one is a student-driven research project, part two is a pubic exhibition of learning at the online conference. In preparation for the conference, participating GOA courses and courses at GOA member schools adopted the following prompt as the launch point for their research projects:
Take concepts learned and research conducted in your course to shape and live out a real-world project that aims at making an impact in a community that’s important to you.
The project requirements ask students to meet three main objectives:
- Generate a “beautiful question” (Warren Berger) which serves to focus research and empower students to pursue a topic of personal interest.
- Include student voice and perspective in the presentation of their learning. Many teachers frame this as a “for now” response that asks students to articulate an impact for their project: raising awareness of an issue in their community, promoting grassroots action, or advocating for institutional change.
- Engage conference visitors with a call to action.
Through this inquiry-based approach, students are able to engage with an authentic audience, gather feedback on their project, and learn from each other. The message to students is clear: You can make an impact.
This year’s student presenters came from 96 GOA member schools in 20 different countries. In addition to students from ten participating GOA courses, we welcomed students from on-campus courses at Head-Royce School, American School in Japan, The Downtown School, Savannah Country Day School, Providence Day School, Cranbrook Schools, and American International School Chennai who all participated in our three-week Catalyst Project Flex Course leading up to the conference.
Several student projects have received recognition for excellent research, the potential to spark change or create an impact in the community they identified, or the project’s overall popularity with conference visitors.
2021 Catalyst Conference Award Winners
GOA Citations
GOA Citations are awarded to the catalyst projects that best represent the goals of the conference: raising awareness, promoting grassroots action, and advocating for institutional change. This year, there were 88 projects that received citations, based on teacher nominations, recognizing an exceptional overall process from crafting the “beautiful question” to thoroughly researching and carrying out their response. Explore the projects that received GOA Citations.
Audience Award
The Audience Choice Award recognizes the student projects that capture the greatest audience attention and enthusiasm, determined by likes and comments shared on project webapges. This year’s Audience Choice Award recipients are:
Caitlin, Ransom Everglades School (Florida, USA), GOA Positive Psychology: How can GRATITUDE PRACTICES HELP REDUCE the amount of ANXIETY teenagers face on a day to day basis?
David, Hawken School (Ohio, USA), GOA Game Theory: How can I employ Game Theory to better understand and identify the tactics used by mapmakers that create “Gerrymandered” Maps? Additionally, how can these game theory models inform those working to create legislation that assists in preventing Partisan Gerrymandering?
Iyobosa, Head-Royce School (California, USA), Head-Royce US History: Problem Solving Past and Present: How Does the Healthcare System Fail Black Women?
James, Polytechnic School (California, USA), GOA Architecture: How can we use art to build community and enrich the lives of young and old while creating a sustainable and environmentally friendly space where nature and art can coexist?
Laura, Providence Day School (North Carolina, USA), GOA Architecture: How Can We Provide Sustainable Jobs for Great Falls and Increase Tourism in the Town?
Laya, Greenhill School (Texas, USA), GOA Positive Psychology: THE RACE PROJECT
Rubi, West Point Grey Academy (British Columbia, Canada), GOA Abnormal Psychology: HOW CAN WE SHIFT THE NARRATIVE OF DISORDERED EATING IN TEENAGERS CONVERSATIONS?
Sanay, American School in Dhaka (Bangladesh), GOA Game Theory: What is the most optimal option for Egypt to make sure that no more ships get stuck in the future?
Catalyst for Change Prize
The Catalyst for Change Prize is awarded to student projects that present the most compelling and inspiring case for change. These projects are identified as having the greatest potential for making an impact. The 2021 Catalyst for Change Prize recipients are:
Alex, Punahou School (Hawaii, USA), GOA Architecture: How Can Sustainable and Green Architecture Revitalize Hawaii’s Chinatown?
Brecon, Greenwich Academy (Connecticut, USA), GOA Architecture: HOW CAN WE BUILD A SAFER ENVIRONMENT FOR PEOPLE AND ANIMALS THROUGH WILDLIFE BRIDGES?
David, Hawken School (Ohio, USA), GOA Game Theory: How can I employ Game Theory to better understand and identify the tactics used by mapmakers that create “Gerrymandered” Maps? Additionally, how can these game theory models inform those working to create legislation that assists in preventing Partisan Gerrymandering?
Madison, Lily, Leyton, and Finn, Cranbrook Schools (Michigan, USA), Cranbrook Psychology of Social Change: What is Locker Room Talk and How Can We Use Insights from Psychology to Reduce It?
Olivia, French American International School (California, USA), GOA Architecture: Can we build a community to create a pathway out of poverty for people experiencing homelessness in San Francisco?
Sally, The Downtown School (Washington, USA), Downtown School Mathematical and Computational Thinking II: Voting in the United States: How Can We Make Elections More Equitable for All?
Congratulations to all of the award recipients! We are so impressed by their impactful work and inspired by their commitment to using what they have learned to make a difference.
More resources on designing student-driven authentic assessments:
- Ask Me Anything: Moving Beyond Final Exams (Recording of panel discussion with teachers who brought the Catalyst Project and Conference to their classrooms).
- Mission in Action: How Designing for Student Voice Can Drive School Mission
- Mission in Action: Three Ways Competency-Based Learning Supports School Mission
The Catalyst Project and Conference is a signature GOA learning experience for high school students. All GOA member schools are invited to participate in the project and conference. To get involved, contact us. If you are interested in learning more about designing student-driven authentic learning assessments in your own setting, please join us for one of our summer design institutes for educators.