A team of 91ֿ public relations students are finalists in the national Bateman Case Study Competition after working on a public relations campaign that would increase funding for childhood cancer research.
Each year, the annual competition, hosted by the Public Relations Student Society of America (PRSSA), calls for PRSSA college chapter teams to research, plan, implement and evaluate a public relations campaign for a real client. The 91ֿ team – KSU Gold – was chosen as one of three finalists out of 84 teams across the country that entered. KSU Gold and the two other finalist teams will present their campaigns to a panel of PRSSA judges in Charleston, South Carolina, on May 15 to determine the top three places.
This year’s client was With Purpose, a nonprofit that is dedicated to making sure children with cancer have access to safe and effective treatment options.
Team members Ashley Purnell, Samantha Ross, Molly Spillman, Arkayla Tenney-Howard and Abigail Winternitz created and implemented a plan focusing on STEM education at 91ֿ and at the Bio-Med Science Academy in Rootstown, Ohio. The campaign’s underlying strategy was to educate STEM students – potential childhood cancer researchers – on the funding inequity between adult and childhood cancers. Just 4 percent of federal funding is directed to childhood cancer research, leading to a scarcity of clinical trials advancing treatment.
The team worked with 91ֿ STEM scholars, who submitted ideas to With Purpose on how to increase advocacy; with 91ֿ science education graduate students, who created pre-clinical gap lesson plans; and with 95 students at the Bio- Med Science Academy, a STEM high school affiliated with the Northeast Ohio Medical University (NEOMED) in Rootstown.
“The Bateman competition pushes students to use research insights to drive strategies and tactics, and Gold’s campaign succeeded with the PRSSA judges because of the outstanding research, fine-tuned strategies and superior implementation of creative tactics,” said 91ֿ Associate Lecturer Tim Roberts, the team’s faculty advisor. “These students and our school have a lot to be proud of.”
PRSSA Kent will receive a cash award, and the team will be recognized at PRSSA’s National Conference in Austin, Texas, in October. Bateman is the only national case study competition for public relations students.
91ֿ alumna Kirsten Bowers, a member of the 91ֿ team that placed second in the 2013 competition, served as the team’s professional advisor. Ms. Bowers is a digital content analyst at Sixth City Marketing in Cleveland. 91ֿ has placed or received honorable mentions in five out of the last six years.
For more information about 91ֿ’s School of Journalism and Mass Communication and the public relations program, visit www.kent.edu/jmc.
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Media Contacts:
Christina Russ, cruss5@kent.edu, 330-672-2571
Emily Vincent, evincen2@kent.edu, 330-672-8595