See the results of the 2020 Student Mapmaking Contest on the "Mapping the Bay" virtual exhibit page:
https://exhibits.lib.berkeley.edu/spotlight/mapthebay/feature/map-contest-2020
Held in conjunction with our upcoming virtual exhibit, Mapping the Bay (live May 15, 2020!), we invite students to create their own maps--both real and imagined--of the Bay Area.
Note these important dates:
Follow https://twitter.com/geolibraryucb for updates!
Follow these TWO steps to enter the contest:
A panel of UC Berkeley judges will review all eligible entries received and select the finalists.
The selected finalists will be notified by May 15, 2020.
The finalists will be featured on the Earth Sciences & Map Library's Contest website & Map the Bay Virtual Exhibit, from May 15, 2020 to May 22, 2020. Through a combination of online community voting and local judging, the winning maps will be selected. Limit one (1) vote per person during the online voting period. Voting begins on May 15 and ends at midnight on May 22. The creators of the winning maps will be notified by May 26.
Winning entries will be featured in the Map the Bay online exhibit, and be reproduced on print-from-home postcards.
Q. Can I work with another student to make my map?
A. Sorry, no. All the work needs to be your own!
Q. Which will be more likely to win: maps made on computers or hand-drawn maps?
A. The final winner will be chosen by online voting. There will be finalists in each category so digital maps and hand-drawn maps are not necessarily in competition. The finalists will be chosen by committee based on aesthetics (how nice they look) and originality (creativity and uniqueness).
Q. Can I make a map of the whole world? What about outer space?
A. While we encourage creativity, your map must have a Bay Area connection. It can be realistic. It can be idealistic. It can represent some version of your street, your favorite park, your city, or the entire Bay Area, but it needs to have a local connection.
Q. Do you have any example maps?
A. Our contest is modeled after the Osher Library Mapmaking Contest. See their site for examples of past maps: https://oshermaps.org/contest-2019
Q. Can I use any art material to make my map, so long as it is flat?
A. You can use any medium, but because we cannot accept original drawn maps at this time, you will need to scan or photograph your final product so make sure whatever you use will come through clearly in an image.
Q. Can I put printed images on a hand-drawn map?
A. You can create images on the computer, print them off, and paste them on your map if you would like. However, if you’re using images you get online, a lot of that is protected by copyright laws, and we could theoretically get in trouble for displaying it on our website. For that reason, all of the illustrations should be your own.
Q. When you say that my map can be created on a computer, are you talking about a certain program?
A. There are multiple programs that can be used to design maps, but we were specifically thinking of design software like GIMP or Adobe Photoshop, or digital map software like QGIS or ArcGIS Online. See https://guides.lib.berkeley.edu/mapthebay/tools for suggestions.
Q. Who counts as a student?
A. All students who attend Bay Area K-12 institutions, as well as college students enrolled at Bay Area based institutions (community college, university) are all eligible.
Email map-contest@berkeley.edu with questions.
K-5 students, need help getting started?
Click, print & color this:
Entries that do not comply with the contest rules and submission requirements will be disqualified. Non-winning entrants will not be individually notified of the results. Only one UC Berkeley Earth Sciences & Map Library Mapmaking Contest entry per student per year will be accepted. The decisions of the UC Berkeley Earth Sciences & Map Library and the Judges are final. Relatives of judges are not eligible. The UC Berkeley Earth Sciences & Map Library has the right to use the first name and school of any UC Berkeley Earth Sciences & Map Library Mapmaking Contest participant, without compensation to administer and promote the Contest, and retains ownership of all entries and may copy, modify, distribute and publicly display them.