The Best Environmental Competitions for Students.
Mladiinfo is a world-recognized website, so thanks to Mladiinfo’s reliable information and opportunities, I was able to submit my illustration to UN world report 2013 under the theme of youth migration.
For the 2012 essay contest, the essay topic is: “The Results of Honey Bee Pollination in My Community” Honey bees pollinate a wide variety of plants. The food crops that benefit from honey bee pollination have been said to contribute one-third of the American diet. In addition, many non-food plantings and natural environmental plants benefit.
Student Essay Contest Results. 2018 Essay Contest Results. Graduate category. Winner: Chukwudi Ezeani (MA Student in Environmental, Resource and Development Economics at the University of Winnipeg) The Effect of Deregulation on Price per Kilowatt Hour (kwh) of Electricity in the United States. Ezeani engages with the classic economic theories of regulation through an analysis of electricity.
Winner certificates, also in pdf format, will include the names of the students. These should arrive via email by late August. The registered user email address will be used. The best submission, regardless of category, wins the grand prize, consisting of the space settlement submission being placed on the contest World Wide Web site. The National Space Society (NSS) invites all contest.
The Essay Contest is a cooperative effort between the South Dakota Department of Agriculture, Division of Resource Conservation and Forestry, the State Association of Conservation Districts, Pierre McDonald's. The contest is open to fifth and sixth grade students from South Dakota. Rules and contest flyers are available in January of each year.
Each year, the Web of Life Foundation sponsors an essay contest looking for the best non-technical English language writing on themes related to socio-environmental issues. Damon’s essay Brown is Just as Important as Green was just awarded the Overall First Place Winner for 2012’s contest. WOLFoundation is a non-profit organization aimed at encouraging dialog and fresh thinking on.
Tessa Yang is a first-year MFA candidate in fiction writing at Indiana University. Her stories have appeared or are forthcoming in Clockhouse, Lunch Ticket, R.kv.r.y Quarterly and others. She enjoyed reading and responding to Kim Jung-hyuk’s “The Glass Shield” for its striking imagistic patterning, and for the author’s ability to comment on the place of art in society with good humor.