15 November, 2016 - 10:50
The project of SGUshchyonka's editors won the second prize in the international contest
On November 10, Rossiya Segodnya (Russia Today) International Information Centre hosted a presentation of projects from Eventiada Awards 2016 short list. SSU's project, The City of Three Fish, took the second prize in Best PR Project student nomination. It was presented by its author, four-year student of the Institute of Philology and Journalism Daria Zaytseva.
Eventiada Awards International Contest of Student and Corporate Communicative Projects is being held for the fifth time and received over 800 projects from 124 cities of 6 counries. There were five works nomaniatons: corporate, student, special, healthy lifestyle, and school.
Projects selected by the jury for the short list were presented by their authors. The jury included 20 represantitives of large international and Russian companies. The judges pointed out that SSU's project had been created with great love for Saratov.
On November 11, a forum took place that consisted of two sections – The Future of the Media, and The Future of Leadership, and gathered experts like Head of Corporate PR and Strategic Projects of Kaspersky Lab Rainer Bock, CEO of M3 Communications Group Maxim Behar, TV presenter of Channel One Russia Arina Sharapova and others.
After the forum, the awarding ceremony took place. In Best PR Project nomination the third prize went to the students of Higher School of Economics with Communication School for the Youth project. The seconf prize – to SSU's The City of Three Fish, and the winner was #доноржизни (#lifedonor) social project developed by the Faculty of Media and Audiovisual Arts of Moscow State Institute of Culture.
The City of Three Fish is a new project of thematic routes aroun Saratov the region that won a grant for development at Territoriya Smyslov na Klyazme Forum. It is planned to create a multimedia platform including a website and a mobile app. The routes are worked out by SSU students and controled by SSU science workers.