Scholarship Video Topic
Students applying for The Stuckey Firm, LLC’s scholarship must create a short video answering the following question:
- Should the right to a jury trial be expanded or restricted in injury cases?
The firm encourages students to cite relevant sources when arguing their positions. Please keep videos between two and three minutes in length. Upon completing a video, an applicant can submit that video to their YouTube account as an unlisted upload. Students can then include a link to that unlisted video alongside their application form.
Tips and Tricks for Video Creation
We want all students applying for The Stuckey Firm Scholarship to submit well-crafted videos for consideration. It’s with that standard in mind that we encourage students to:
- Hold their recording device of choice as still as possible
- Record in well-lit, non-echoing environments
- Include their full name and the name of The Stuckey Firm Scholarship at the beginning of their video
- Use copyright-free material to supplement their scripts
- Include credits and information about media editing tools in the video description or at the end of the video
While we encourage students to explore their creativity through the use of editing tools like Adobe Creative Cloud, the use of editing tools will not impact a student’s eligibility. In other words, The Stuckey Firm, LLC will not take a student’s editing ability into account when awarding its scholarship.
Use of AI When Creating Scholarship Videos
Students may not use AI to generate video scripts, create fake actors, automatically generate their scholarship applications, or modify their voices. Any student caught doing so will be automatically disqualified from consideration for The Stuckey Firm, LLC’s scholarship. However, students may use AI to generate a video’s B-roll footage.