User:WWB Too/StudentCam

StudentCam is an annual competition selecting the best video documentaries on current-affairs topics created by middle and high school students. It is sponsored by the Cable-Satellite Public Affairs Network's (C-SPAN) Classroom project. All winning documentaries are available to watch on the StudentCam website. The top 25 winners are interviewed for television broadcast and have their documentaries aired on C-SPAN.

Overview
The aim of the StudentCam competition, as stated by C-SPAN, is to provide an opportunity for young people to voice their opinions on current events. For the competition, middle and high school students can enter alone or in groups of up to three and must create a video documentary between 5 and 8 minutes in length, which presents more than one side to the selected topic and includes related C-SPAN programming. Each year a new theme for the documentaries is provided, related to current affairs, and entrants in the competition must use this as the basis for their entry. Subjects of the winning documentaries have ranged from video game violence to illegal immigration.

The deadline for entries is in January each year and the StudentCam winners are announced live on C-SPAN's Washington Journal, usually in March each year. Following the announcement, the top 25 StudentCam entries are shown on C-SPAN, with one documentary shown each weekday morning, accompanied by a telephone interview with the student filmmakers. All of the winning documentaries are available to view on the StudentCam website. The winning filmmakers receive cash prizes typically totaling $50,000, with the grand prize-winner receiving $5,000, in addition to being featured on C-SPAN. , 75 entries each year are chosen as prize-winners, and 11 teacher awards are given to teachers who incorporate the competition into their classes.

The sponsor of the StudentCam competition is C-SPAN Classroom, a free membership organization providing teachers with C-SPAN materials for classes and research. Promotion of the competition is often supplemented by local cable providers.

History
The StudentCam competition developed from a documentary competition called CampaignCam, run by C-SPAN during the 2004 presidential campaign as a way of including students' views about the election. The StudentCam forerunner won a Beacon Award in 2005, conferred by the cable industry for excellence in communications and public affairs.

In 2006, StudentCam was launched by C-SPAN, adding a requirement that students include relevant C-SPAN programming in their documentary. The 2009 competition received the most entries to date, when nearly 2,000 students from 41 states, the District of Columbia and Guam submitted a total of 921 submissions. The grand prize winner of the competition, Sawyer Bowman, a 10th grade student from Davidson, NC was congratulated by President Barack Obama via a specially-recorded video message. A first-prize winner in the 2010 competition, Matthew Shimura, met First Lady Michelle Obama at the White House in April 2010 during a Town Hall for her "Let's Move!" initiative, to talk about fighting childhood obesity, which was the subject of Matthew's video.