Four categories that I feel like having a dynamic, maintained list would be helpful for:
1) Funding opportunities—this might include sub-sections for:
Large Grants (>$50k?),
Small Grants (<$50k?),
Micro Grants (things like covering new personal equipment, webhosting, software licenses, LLC incorporation fees?),
Learning Grants (scholarships, paying for courses, personal development, living expenses while in school?),
grants divvied up by cause area,
and grants for specific things (eg a compute credit program for independent researchers getting started, maybe a grant offering to subsidize daycare if you want to independently work on cool stuff but are spending a ton of time on childcare?)
2) Open problems/project ideas - ??? not sure how to make this work, or how to moderate this, but would be cool if possible
3) Volunteer/collaborator searches—I see a lot of posts of this type in the EA Slack teams I’m in, and it seems like these posts get lost in the milieu. These are different from EA Job Board posts, as these aren’t really jobs so much as… pre-jobs?
4) Free (legit) learning materials—anecdotally, I notice people get really stoked when they discover that so many AI related resources (eg the deep learning book) are free.50. I think this is especially true for people in developing countries, though I can’t speak to that personally. Compiling other substantial free materials, syllabi, etc related to other areas—maybe other HTML versions of textbooks? - would be cool (filtering out blatant content marketing materials and Libgen rips ofc).
I thought this was lovely, Lizka! I wasn’t expecting to see a picture-book-type entry in this contest, so thank you for that.
My biggest suggestion would be that I’m seeing several picture books presented in your story as it is right now. How did Black Bird make the decision to peck at the little tree? What were some counterarguments from the birds swarming the man with an axe? I feel like you could draw each scenario you presented out into a full picture book with a clearer central conflict. This could also help draw older readers in, and perhaps address the ‘preachy’ vibe some commenters mentioned.
I’m immediately reminded of The Little Red Hen—which focuses on not sharing bread with others. Written during the social-Darwin-ish Gilded Age, it was popular during the Reagan administration as a tool for illustrating the dangers of welfare. I’m seeing some evidence that Reagan even rewrote the story as an ‘economics lesson’ for a 1976 radio program. Birds + bread seem to be good parable fodder, perhaps?