Calling all students: We want to publish you!

We want your ideas, your creative energy, your soul - for our new Student Voices column. Sharpen those pencils.
Crosscut archive image.

Got ideas?

We want your ideas, your creative energy, your soul - for our new Student Voices column. Sharpen those pencils.

Are you a student in the Pacific Northwest? We want to pick your brain.

Crosscut is launching a new project called the Student Voice, because we believe students in our community are brimming with creative ideas that need to be heard - and shared.

Every Wednesday, we’ll pose a “Question of the Week” on Crosscut.com and social media and in our Student Voice mailing list. (Sign up here.) All you students out there, from high school on up, are invited to respond. (Just two paragraphs, please.) Our editorial team will review your submissions, select the best ones (most creative, insightful, well-written, funny is always good, etc.) and publish them on Crosscut.com.

The first Question of the Week is: What issue isn't getting enough coverage in the news? Why is this issue important? Submit your fabulous answer here.

We’re excited about sharing more student voices, insights and perspectives with Crosscut readers. We hope this is the beginning of a broader and more inclusive community conversation about the issues that are important to all of us.

We can’t wait to hear what you have to say.

 

  

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About the Authors & Contributors

Kate Harloe

Kate Harloe

Kate Harloe is Crosscut's Community Manager & Editorial Assistant. After graduating from Hamilton College, Kate completed two seasons of work for the Southwest Conservation Corps before moving to Seattle to pursue her interest in journalism. Her background in writing and community organizing shaped her role at Crosscut as the connector between editorial and development operations. When not obsessing over media, culture, literature, or social justice, Kate can be found frolicking in the outdoors, or sitting round the dinner table of a cooperative community that she founded with the help of seven fellow Seattleites.