UC Santa Cruz students compete in global challenge for $1 million Hult Prize

Three seniors participating in world’s largest student competition, competing for start-up funding to solve President Clinton’s Early Childhood Challenge

UCSC students Kymberley Kudravy, Justin Kohlberg, Terre Lee

From left to right: Kymberley Kudravy, Justin Kohlberg, Terre Lee

A team of UC Santa Cruz students has advanced to the regional finals of the sixth annual Hult Prize, the world’s largest student competition and start-up platform for social good.

Each year the Hult Prize, in partnership with President Bill Clinton and the Clinton Global Initiative, challenges students around the world to develop innovative social enterprises that aim to tackle pressing issues faced by billions of people.

The winners receive $1 million in seed capital, as well as mentorship and advice from the international business community to launch their newly formed company.

Regional rounds of competition are held each spring in Boston, San Francisco, London, Dubai, Shanghai and Sao Paulo, with a final round and awards ceremony held at the Clinton Global Initiative annual meeting each fall.

The UC Santa Cruz team was one of 250 selected from more than 20,000 applications--from over 500 colleges and universities in over 150 countries--to participate in the regional finals. It consists of Terre Lee (double major in music and environmental studies), Kymberley Kudravy (double major in music and business management economics), and Justin Kohlberg (double major in music and film and digital media).

Each team will present their case at the regionals for how they would provide sustainable, high-quality early education solutions to 10 million children under the age of six in urban slums.

“The UCSC team proposes to bring quality enrichment to early childhood education through interactive learning tools inspired by the music program, El Sistema,” said Lee, the team leader. “El Sistema challenges the notion that socioeconomics is the biggest predictor of academic success.”

“It’s a social justice-through-music education program,” she added. “Engaging children in music from a very early age breaks down barriers, from socioeconomic to language, and to special needs.”

Lee has been teaching violin after school at Gault Elementary in Santa Cruz for the past three years, as part of an El Sistema program for children who can’t afford music education.

“Terre, Kymberley and Justin represent the best of UCSC students both in the classroom and in our community,” notes UC Santa Cruz economics professor David Kaun. “Their work with Gault School’s El Sistema program is bringing music to young students, enriching their lives in ways that would not have happened otherwise. The Hult Prize will enable their efforts to expand many times over throughout the community.”

The Hult competition is designed to give student entrepreneurs from around the world a platform to innovate and revolutionize the way society thinks about servicing the poor. The prize money is seeded into the newly created company, which will be run by the student team that came up with the idea.

The UC Santa Cruz team will compete in the San Francisco regionals on March 13-14.

Regional winners will then pitch their start-up at the Clinton Global Initiative annual meeting, where the winner will receive $1 million.