
Two dozen Honors College students and four hours on a Saturday is a recipe for great new ideas, as demonstrated at Honors College Connects鈥 first-ever Nonprofit Hackathon. This event brought three local and one international nonprofit into a space with motivated student volunteers, who participated in a rapid-fire guided challenge in human-centered design 鈥 making and testing rapid prototypes with an eye towards creating user-friendly ideas. Over the course of the day, the students bonded with each other, networked with their nonprofit partner, addressed challenges with brilliant creativity, and had fun giving back to the community.聽
鈥 is a student-led program that connects students with local nonprofits, giving them the opportunity to gain valuable professional experience and develop leadership skills.聽According to HCC student leader Elizabeth Fortson, the鈥痬ain goal of the HNRS 261 Honors College Connects class is "to work with nonprofit partners鈥痶o solve some kind of strategic question that the nonprofit has."
Some of these questions can take multiple weeks鈥痮r鈥痬onths鈥痮f brainpower and teamwork to tackle, but the鈥疕ackathon sought to tackle something different.鈥疪ather than taking a whole semester, the Hackathon gave one day to solving smaller topics.鈥
In addition to creating a space to solve these smaller topics, the event reached students who are not able to participate in the semester-long HCC classroom experience. Brandon Roca, another鈥痵tudent leader, noted that,鈥渁s a leadership team we saw a need for [these] students to get more involved and see what human centered design鈥痠s all鈥痑bout.鈥濃
Drawing on the multidisciplinary strengths of the Honors College's learning community, HCC is able to take on projects that do not fit neatly in a single discipline or field. Fortson says of this that聽鈥渕any of these problems aren鈥檛 in the realm聽of聽something聽a government major or a biology major聽would focus on鈥 so having all these different聽multidisciplinary students brings a lot of different perspectives in terms of聽what we should do, how we should do it, why it would work, why it wouldn鈥檛 work.鈥澛
The morning of the聽Hackathon, students had four hours to rapidly respond to the issues the four nonprofits faced.聽The nonprofits featured in Fall 2021聽were , , , and .聽FACETS serves individuals and families who are homeless, low-income, or at-risk in Fairfax County, especially in response to the COVID-19 pandemic;聽DATA finds solutions to transportation issues faced in the Dulles area and promotes sustainable transportation options;聽the Starfish Foundation聽provides means for at-risk Ecuadorian youth to achieve post-secondary education and strives to empower these students;聽and Veterans Moving Forward聽provides service dogs and canine therapy services to veterans with physical and/or mental health challenges at no cost to the veteran.
Roca聽remarked that the rapid-fire format of a Hackathon gave the nonprofit partners聽chances to benefit by the "multiple perspectives" that Honors College students bring to the table. At the event, students helped the nonprofits with a range of changes, including logo design, public relations,聽outreach to different demographics, and evaluation of聽innovative聽programs.
The impact of the聽Hackathon聽was significant.聽The nonprofits involved were able to take the聽student-designed聽ideas and apply聽them聽to聽their聽own operations. Fortson聽noted that her favorite part of the聽Hackathon聽was watching the lively energy of the event, which was characterized by students running around and solving problems, resulting in amazing, fully-developed ideas that came from that chaos in a very short period of time.聽聽
Roca聽says that聽the HCC class will spend the rest of the semester working on聽some bigger projects for these same nonprofits - the kind that聽are not聽solved in a day. Honors College Connects plans to offer a Hackathon each Fall semester moving forward, extending the reach of the program and encouraging students who are not in the Honors College Connects classes to make an impact.聽