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April 22, 2008 — Local high school teams may
have walked away with the trophies in Tuesday’s Social
Entrepreneurship Challenge, but communities across
Cattaraugus and Allegany counties were the true winners.
The objective: implement a service
learning project partnering New York REAL, Cattaraugus
Allegany BOCES, St. Bonaventure University Students in Free
Enterprise (SIFE), and area high schools to increase blood
donations to the local regional hospitals.
The
result: dozens of local high school students helped organize
eight blood drives this spring that netted 250 pints of
blood.
Eight high schools formed teams to
take on the social entrepreneurship challenge and create
marketing plans for a blood drive in their community that
would assist the non-profit Community Blood Bank (CBB),
which provides about 40,000 units of blood per year to
hospitals in Western New York and
Northwest Pennsylvania.
Team members obtained sponsors for
their themed blood drive; developed radio, video and print
advertising; surveyed donors and non-donors; and researched
the blood bank and its challenges.
CBB officials are holding up this
competition as having nationwide potential for addressing
the problem of chronic blood shortages.
“This program is ground
breaking,” stated Dan DesRochers, director of marketing for
CBB.
“This competition has
implications for the entire country in terms of how one
markets blood drives in high schools.
We believe that we have a
prototype that can revolutionize how one can change
life-long donation patterns.
We are indebted to NY REAL,
CABOCES, St. Bonaventure and these schools for what they
have done.”
Participating schools were Belfast, Bolivar-Richburg, Fillmore, Friendship, Genesee
Valley,
Olean, Scio and
Whitesville.
The students’ projects were judged on
the development of a plans book and Tuesday’s presentation
of their project to a panel of judges.
Teams were also judged on
their ability to address ethical issues relating to the
blood industry.
Schools earning prizes in the overall
competition were:
Recipients of individual marketing
awards were
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Marketing
plan:
Genesee
Valley
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Theme: Fillmore
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TV ad:
Genesee
Valley
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Radio ad:
Fillmore
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Print
ad: Fillmore and
Genesee
Valley
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Non-traditional:
Genesee
Valley
Recipients of
the ethics awards were:
Since
inaugurated by New York REAL in 2006 these high school
business competitions have improved in both quality and
scope.
Dr. Barbara Van Wicklin, Program Manager for Professional
Development at CA BOCES, said, “The level of professionalism
exhibited by the students is amazing. Each year it gets
better and better.”
Dr. Todd Palmer,
adviser to St. Bonaventure’s Students in Free Enterprise
organization, described the service learning competition as
a reinvention of the high school blood drive.
“It’s different
from anything I’ve ever seen before,” he said. “The response
(to the drives) has been overwhelming. Each of these schools
had great blood drives, extracting approximately 35 percent
more blood than in traditional drives.”
In addition to
building marketing and communications skills, “It gave
students a chance to reach out and appreciate their
communities,” said Hallie Steube, a graduate assistant with
SIFE. Students at one of the schools received internship
offers from television and radio stations they interacted
with for the project.
Colleen Myers,
who served as adviser of the Fillmore Central School’s team,
was impressed as she watched students at her school “going
out of their comfort zone” to make contacts and organize
Fillmore’s blood drive.
“These are kids
who are really motivated and really trying to focus on a
cohesive theme,” said Myers, who is a math teacher at
Fillmore and a 1981 graduate of St. Bonaventure.
Groundwork for
the blood drives began last fall with a leadership training
day for the teachers and student leaders. St. Bonaventure
business and education students followed up by visiting each
school several times over the past few months.
In addition to
cash prizes, which were provided by CBB, members of the
winning team will have the opportunity to spend a day in
Erie,
Pa.,
talking with top marketing executives. Joining SIFE and
Community Blood Bank in sponsoring the Social
Entrepreneurship Challenge were New York Real, which
promotes entrepreneurship throughout Allegany and
Cattaraugus counties through project-based learning and
teacher training, a unit of Cattaraugus-Allegany BOCES.
The Community
Blood Bank of Northwest Pennsylvania and
New York is the exclusive supplier of blood to
all the hospitals in Erie,
Warren, McKean and Elk counties and provides about 90
percent of all the blood used in Chautauqua, Cattaraugus and
Allegany counties in Western New York.
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