Progress update:
Since February 28th, an additional 35 competitions have launched on challenge.gov for a total of 103 and offering a prize purse of $130M to date in FY24. The Department of Health and Human Services, Department of Defense, and Department of Energy continue to be the primary sponsors of competitions on challenge.gov. The federal prize and challenge community of practice has remained steady at around 700 members while public engagement with challenge.gov continues to increase with over 15,000 public solver accounts on the platform and over 10,000 public subscribers to our monthly prize and challenge newsletter.
Citizenscience.gov has maintained the number of projects in the catalog and continues to raise awareness via social media about federal-wide use of citizen science activities to engage the public.
In April, GSA worked closely with OMB and OSTP to support efforts aimed at increasing the federal government’s capacity for public engagement. This work was framed by two primary activities, a federal summit and a prize challenge.
We collaborated with President’s Council of Advisors on Science and Technology, OMB, and OSTP to host the Public Engagement with Science Summit. The summit was well-attended by 98 federal leaders from 16 agencies. OSTP is currently working to draft a toolkit to promote effective strategies and approaches for public engagement with science.
In April, we partnered with OMB to host the PMA Learning Agenda: Public Participation and Community Engagement Evidence Challenge hosted on challenge.gov. This challenge is currently in the second phase of selection and will announce winners in early August.
In April, OSTP released the FY21-22 biennial report to Congress on Federally Sponsored Crowdsourcing, Citizen Science, and Inducement Prize Activity.
Evidence:
Progress update:
In 2024 we continue to see growth and widespread federal interest in the use of prize competitions as an important innovation sourcing mechanism. Since January 19 federal agencies have launched 68 prize competitions on Challenge.Gov. These competitions have offered almost $100M in prize awards to the public. Prize competitions sponsored by cabinet level agencies including the Department of Health and Human Services, Department of Defense, and Department of Energy make up over a third of all competitions launched this year on the Challenge.Gov platform and this indicates that agencies are scaling their use of prize competitions to engage the public in innovation. Interest among federal agencies has increased and the federal prize and challenge community of practice has expanded to over 700 members who represent prize managers and innovation leaders across government.
Similarly, the catalog of projects on CitizenScience.Gov grew to over 550 projects in 2023. Agencies including NOAA, NASA, EPA and others are seeing increased public interest and engagement with these projects that span a variety of models including community science, participatory research, and citizen science.
GSA will be hosting a federal meeting focused on Public Engagement in Science in partnership with the White House, PCAST, and the Wilson Center in mid April 2024. One outcome of the meeting will be the draft of a toolkit to support strategies for public engagement in science.
In the Spring of 2024 OSTP plans to release the FY21-22 biennial report to Congress on Federally Sponsored Crowdsourcing, Citizen Science, and Inducement Prize Activity.
Evidence:
https://www.challenge.gov
https://www.citizenscience.gov
In 2023 we are seeing continued growth of the use of prize competitions as an important sourcing mechanism. Since January 19 federal agencies have launched 68 prize competitions on Challenge.Gov. These competitions have offered almost $100M in prize awards to the public. Prize competitions sponsored by cabinet level agencies including the Department of Health and Human Services, Department of Defense, and Department of Energy make up over a third of all competitions launched this year on the Challenge.Gov platform and this indicates that agencies are scaling their use of prize competitions to engage the public in innovation. Interest among federal agencies has increased and the federal prize and challenge community of practice has expanded to over 700 members who represent prize managers and innovation leaders across government.
Similarly, the catalog of projects on CitizenScience.Gov has grown to over 500 projects in 2023. Agencies including NOAA, NASA, EPA and others are seeing increased public interest and engagement with these projects that span a variety of models including community science, participatory research, and citizen science.