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Digital Responsibility has proudly announced the opening of Digital Privacy Scholarship. It is a scholarship which is intended to educate young people about the importance of maintaining a good digital privacy.
Digital Responsibility was started by a group of Silicon Valley tech employees who wished to share with young people the personal and public consequences of technology. The organization believes that technology is part of our daily lives, but we have an obligation to use it and share it responsibly.
According to Digital Responsibility, it’s important to understand that almost anything we post on the Internet is neither temporary nor private. Furthermore, posting too much information can have devastating consequences. Forty-three percent of employers who checked on social media have decided not to hire someone, according to a CareerBuilder survey. Meanwhile, twelve percent of college admissions officers who checked Facebook of the applicants decided not to admit a successful candidate according to a Kaplan Test Prep survey.
The purpose of this scholarship is to help you understand why you should be cautious about what you post on the Internet. For further information about the Digital Privacy Scholarship and how it works, browse through the end of the article.
What is Digital Privacy Scholarship?
The Digital Privacy Scholarship focuses on an issue that has been in the media a lot lately: privacy on the Internet. According to a CareerBuilder survey, “forty-three percent of employers who checked on social media have decided not to hire someone.” The aim of this scholarship is for students to understand why they should be cautious about what they post on the Internet.
How much money in this scholarship can I get?
The winner of the Digital Privacy Scholarship will receive a $1,000 scholarship.
Who are eligible to apply for a Digital Privacy Scholarship?
Almost any student is able to apply for this scholarship!. You must be a high school freshman, sophomore, junior, or senior or a current or entering college or graduate school student of any level. Home schooled students are also eligible. There is no age limit. The only eligibility requirement is that students must be U.S. citizens.
How can I apply for a Digital Privacy Scholarship?
Complete the application form attached on the website. Additionally, you can also find and complete the essay application online. The scholarship has a “tweet” component to it as you are asked to respond to the following question in 140 characters:
I’m taking responsibility for my digital profile by…
The top 10 applications will be selected as finalists. The finalists will be asked to write a full length 500- to 1,000-word essay about digital privacy.
When will the application end?
The application tenure will be closed on June 30, 2020. All applicants are encourage to apply before the closing date.
How does the committee select the winner?
The scholarship selection committee will select the 10 finalists based on the content of the 140-character message. The winner will be selected based on the content and creativity of the 500- to 1,000-word essay.
How can I win the scholarship?
A common mistake in the writing of essays is to use general statements rather than specific ones. Don’t write, “Education is the key to success.” Instead, give the judges a slice of your life that shows them how education in a single experience or realization has impacted your life. If you write about your desire to become an astronaut, you might explain how this started when your father bought you a model rocket for the five-year-old Christmas you were. Focusing on a particular example of your life will help the readers relate to your experiences and make sure your essay is memorable and original (as a bonus).
You’ll be competing with students who share similar backgrounds and goals for every scholarship you try to win. If you apply for an award that supports students who want to become doctors, you can bet that 99 per cent of applicants also want to become doctors. Consequently , the aim of each scholarship judge is to determine the best applicant from a pool of applicants that look very similar at first glance. Use the essay question as a means to demonstrate to the scholarship committee that you are the most worthy applicant for the award.
As you explain why you deserve to win, it’s important to disclose something about yourself, too. Of course you can’t cover everything about you in the short space of 500 to 1,000 words. That is why sharing a “slice of your life” is one of the most effective techniques. In other words, don’t try to explain everything. Just focus the attention on one aspect of your life. If you write about your involvement in an activity, it may be tempting to sum up your involvement over the years and list many achievements. This would, however, sound more like a resume (which you should include with every application by the way) and it would not tell the judges anything new. However, if you focus on just one aspect of an experience, you could spend some time underneath the surface and share something that would be much more memorable about who you are. To put it another way, you would share a slice of your life.
There’s a saying from an old writer: “There’s an even better editor behind every good writer.” If you want to create a money-winning essay, you need others to help. You don’t have to have a professional editor or even someone good at writing. You just need people who can read your work and provide constructive and useful feedback.
All in all, it may not be your ideal way to spend a Friday night or a Sunday afternoon writing scholarship essays. But remember those essays can win you hundreds, if not thousands, of college dollars. Try to keep that in mind when feeling burned out. Take a break when you really get down on writing. Go outdoors. Watch some insensitive television. Then get back to your essay when you are refreshed.
Moreover, at some point every successful applicant for a scholarship has become tired or disgusted and contemplated quitting. But everybody persevered, and did not give up. They pushed forward, and completed their essays. If they had given up, they would never have won money from the scholarship and all important college diplomas would have been a much more expensive (and impossible) achievement.