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The Best Student Writing Contests for 2024-2025
Help your students take their writing to the next level.
When students write for teachers, it can feel like an assignment. When they write for a real purpose, they are empowered! Student writing contests are a challenging and inspiring way to try writing for an authentic audience— a real panel of judges —and the possibility of prize money or other incentives. We’ve gathered a list of the best student writing contests, and there’s something here for everyone. Prepare highly motivated kids in need of an authentic writing mentor, and watch the words flow.
2024-2025 Student Writing Contests
1. the scholastic art & writing awards.
With a wide range of categories—from critical essays to science fiction and fantasy—the Scholastic Awards are a mainstay of student contests. Each category has its own rules and word counts, so be sure to check out the options before you decide which one is best for your students.
How To Enter
Students in grades 7 to 12, ages 13 and up, may begin submitting work in September by uploading to an online account at Scholastic and connecting to their local region. Entry fees are waived for students in need.
2. YoungArts National Arts Competition
YoungArts offers an annual national competition in the categories of creative nonfiction, novel, play or script, poetry, short story, and spoken word. Student winners may receive awards of up to $10,000 as well as the chance to participate in artistic development with leaders in their fields.
Check out the site for guidelines on writing modes, such as short stories and spoken word poetry, and sign up for updates so you’re ready when the applications open.
FEATURED PICK
3. The Edit
The Edit is a digital storytelling challenge from NBCU Academy and Adobe. Your middle or high school students will build critical communication and collaboration skills as they plan, script, and produce their own 90-second video news reports on wellness topics. Winning classrooms will be rewarded with prizes like GoPros, Fandango gift cards, and more!
It’s free to enter. All submissions must be received by March 3, 2025.
4. Write the World Competitions
Not only is Write the World one of my favorite places to find writing resources, but it also hosts free monthly contests with cash prizes. There are also opportunities for feedback, and lots of ideas to help students get started.
With a student account, young writers draft and submit their work on the website. ADVERTISEMENT
5. National Youth Foundation Programs
Each year, awards are given for Student Book Scholars, Amazing Women, and the “I Matter” Poetry & Art competition. This is a great chance for kids to express themselves with joy and strength.
The rules, prizes, and deadlines vary, so check out the website for more info.
6. American Foreign Service National High School Essay Contest
If you’re looking to help students take a deep dive into international relations, history, and writing, look no further than this essay contest. Winners receive a voyage with the Semester at Sea program and a trip to Washington, D.C.
Students fill out a registration form online, and a teacher or sponsor is required. The deadline to enter is March 1, 2025.
7. Poets.org’s Annual Dear Poet Contest
Each year during National Poetry Month in April, students can write letters to famous poets in response to their work. In this interactive contest, all submissions receive a general letter and certificate, and winners receive a personalized response from the poet they wrote to. It’s a great way to #TeachLivingPoets, and kids get to ask questions about the creative process.
Return to the site in April to find the forms for submitting letters. A guardian or teacher must also provide a letter so the submissions can be published.
8. John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Essay Contest
This annual contest invites students to write about an elected official’s act of political courage that occurred anytime after 1917, the year Kennedy was born. The winner receives $10,000, and 16 runners-up also receive a variety of cash prizes.
Students may submit a 700- to 1,000-word essay through January 12. The essay must feature more than five sources and a full bibliography.
9. WriteCause Competitions
These free quarterly contests accept a variety of written submissions, each based on a different quarterly theme. WriteCause also provides research links so students can learn about the topics before writing. Open to kids ages 13 to 18.
Check out the Compete link for contest information each quarter, and use the online submission form.
10. The Princeton Ten-Minute Play Contest
Looking for student writing contests for budding playwrights? This exclusive competition, which is open only to high school juniors, is judged by the theater faculty of Princeton University. Students submit short plays in an effort to win recognition and cash prizes of up to $500. (Note: Only open to 11th graders.)
Students submit one 10-page play script online or by mail. The deadline will be announced later this year.
11. Princeton University Poetry Contest for High School Students
The Leonard L. Milberg ’53 High School Poetry Prize recognizes outstanding work by student writers in 11th grade. Prizes range from $100 to $500.
Students in 11th grade can submit their poetry. Contest details will be published this fall.
12. The New York Times Tiny Memoir Contest
This contest is also a wonderful writing challenge, and the New York Times includes lots of resources and models for students to be able to do their best work. They’ve even made a classroom poster !
Submissions need to be made electronically by November 1.
13. The New York Times Contest Calendar
For students who want to extend beyond 100-word memoirs, the New York Times also provides competitive opportunities in areas including photography, opinion pieces, and podcasting.
Find an area that students are interested in and check out the rules and deadlines.
14. The Patricia Grodd Poetry Prize for Young Writers
The Patricia Grodd Poetry Prize for Young Writers is open to high school sophomores and juniors, and the winner receives a full scholarship to a Kenyon Review Young Writers Workshop .
Submissions for the prize are accepted electronically from November 1 through November 30.
15. Jane Austen Society Essay Contest
High school students can win up to $1,000 and publication by entering an essay on a topic specified by the Jane Austen Society related to a Jane Austen novel.
Details for the 2024 contest will be announced in November. Essay length is from six to eight pages, not including works cited.
16. Rattle Young Poets Anthology
Open to students from 15 to 18 years old who are interested in publication and exposure over monetary awards.
Teachers may choose up to five students to submit up to four poems each on their behalf. The deadline is November 15.
17. The Black River Chapbook Competition
This is a chance for new and emerging writers to gain publication in their own professionally published chapbook, as well as $500 and free copies of the book.
There is an $18 entry fee, and submissions are made online.
18. YouthPlays New Voices
Young writers under 18 create new one-act plays for the stage. Winners receive cash awards and publication.
Scroll all the way down their web page for information on the contest, which accepts non-musical plays between 10 and 40 minutes long, submitted electronically. The entry period opens each year in January.
19. The Ocean Awareness Contest
The theme for the 2025 Ocean Awareness Contest is “Connections to Nature: Looking Inside, Going Outside.” Students are eligible for a wide range of monetary prizes up to $1,000.
Students from 11 to 18 years old may submit work in the categories of art, creative writing, poetry and spoken word, film, interactive media and multimedia, or music and dance, accompanied by a reflection. The deadline is June 13.
20. EngineerGirl Annual Writing Contest
Each year, EngineerGirl sponsors an essay contest with topics centered on the impact of engineering on the world, and students can win up to $500 in prize money. This contest is a nice bridge between ELA and STEM and great for teachers interested in incorporating an interdisciplinary project into their curriculum. The new contest asks for pieces describing the life cycle of an everyday object. Check out these tips for integrating the content into your classroom .
Students submit their work electronically by February 1. Check out the full list of rules and requirements here .
21. NCTE Student Writing Awards
The National Council of Teachers of English offers several student writing awards, including Achievement Awards in Writing (for 10th- and 11th-grade students), Promising Young Writers (for 8th-grade students), and an award to recognize Excellence in Art and Literary Magazines.
Deadlines range from October 28 to February 15. Check out NCTE.org for more details.
22. Narrative High School Writing Contest
The prompt for Narrative’s 10th Annual Writing Contest is “What I Cannot Say, I’ll Say Here.” Stories are limited to 600 words, and kids can also enter poems of no more than 50 lines. The website also provides different ideas and insights to help students approach the prompt.
Students in grades 9 through 12 submit their work through their teacher, who may submit up to 10 pieces.
23. US vs HATE Contests
Engage social media-savvy students with this creative contest that seeks messages of kindness, inclusivity, and bridge-building.
Check the website for an informational poster as well as guidelines and ideas about how students can submit their work.
24. National PTA Reflections Awards
The National PTA offers a variety of awards, including one for literature, in their annual Reflections Contest. Students of all ages can submit entries on the specified topic to their local PTA Reflections program. From there, winners move to the local area, state, and national levels. National-level awards include an $800 prize and a trip to the National PTA Convention.
This program requires submitting to PTAs who participate in the program. Check your school’s PTA for their deadlines.
25. World Historian Student Essay Competition
The World Historian Student Essay Competition is an international contest open to students enrolled in grades K through 12 in public, private, and parochial schools, as well as those in home-study programs. The $500 prize is based on an essay that addresses one of this year’s two prompts.
Students can submit entries via email or regular mail before May 1.
26. Future Scholar Foundation Short Story Contest
Monthly contests, each with different themes, offer Amazon gift cards and publication as awards. It’s open to elementary and middle school students.
Check the site each month for the new theme. Submissions are due on the 28th.
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Our 2024-25 Student Contest Calendar
Ten challenges that invite teenagers to engage, experiment, reflect and create — via writing, photography, audio, video and more.
By The Learning Network
Our annual Contest Calendar is probably the single most powerful thing we publish all year. Teachers tell us they plan their classes around our challenges, and tens of thousands of teenagers around the globe participate by creating narratives, reviews, videos, opinion pieces, podcasts, illustrations, photo essays and more.
For us, these contests are an honor and a joy to host. We love learning from young people — about what moves them and makes them mad, what intrigues and confuses and delights and defines them.
This year, we are bringing back some recent and longtime favorites, as well as introducing a few new challenges.
To begin, we have two options this fall in response to the U.S. election, though students around the globe are welcome. In September, we open with a series of special forums that invite teenagers to have thoughtful conversations about their civic and political identities, values and beliefs. Then, if they choose, they can work alone or with others to make something in response — whether in writing, video, audio or visual art.
In the spring, we’re offering “My List,” a twist on our long-running review contest. This time, students can choose any collection of three to five works of art or culture to group in some way and then tell us why we should — or shouldn’t — check them out.
We’ll be posting the full rules and guidelines for each contest here when it opens. but for now you can look at the related resources we’ve provided, as well as last year’s rules, which will largely remain the same for our returning contests. And don’t forget we have a full yearlong writing curriculum to help support this work.
As always, we hope these contests encourage students to try different ways of thinking and creating, experimenting with both what they want to say and how they want to say it.
If you need some encouragement to participate, we recommend three pieces. Students might start with “ ‘I Was Enough’: How I Stopped Trying to Sound Smart and Found My Genuine Writing Voice ,” by a teenager who reflects on how our competitions have helped her grow. If you are an educator, our reader-submitted “ 10 Reasons to Send Student Work Out Into the World ” might be compelling, as might this essay , published on EdSurge by a teacher in a career and technical education program who uses our contests to help design learning around “authentic issues, problems and ideas.”
To download a PDF version of this contest calendar, click here . Questions? Scroll to the bottom of this post to learn more, write to us at [email protected] or post a comment here.
New! Election 2024 Student Conversation Forum
Reflect on your civic and political values, beliefs and identity and share your perspectives on current issues by participating in our special discussion forums for teenagers.
Run much like our 2020 Civil Conversation Challenge , these forums are accessible ways to help students from around the country and the world have rich discussions about important issues.
Here are the rules and guidelines for this year’s Student Conversation Forum . The five themes, along with dates when each forum will open for comment, are:
Forum 1 | Identity: Who are you, and how does that identity inform your political beliefs and values? (Open)
Forum 2 | Conversations Across Divides: What experiences have you had in talking to those who may not agree with you — whether in school, with friends and family, or online? What has been helpful? What has been hard? Why do these conversations matter? (Open)
Forum 3 | The Issues: What issues matter to you most? How do they connect to your life and the lives of those you care about? (Open)
Forum 4 | Information and Disinformation: Where do you get your information about current events? How do you think these sources affect your understanding of our world? (Open)
Forum 5 | Hope for the Future: What are you optimistic about? What might your generation do better than those that came before it? (Open)
Oct. 2-Nov. 4
New! Coming of Age in 2024: A Multimedia Contest
Choose any of the questions that we’ve posed in the Election 2024 Student Conversation Forum (see above) and make something in response — whether in writing, visual art, video or audio. You can work alone or with others, and you can create almost anything you like.
For instance, you could make …
A poem, a narrative essay or a comic about who you are and how that affects your political beliefs
A podcast, a video or a play about having conversations with those who think differently from you about an issue — or a list of tips for how to have those conversations productively
An opinion essay, a drawing or a song about an issue you care about
An infographic, a diary entry or a video about the news and political information you consume and how it affects you
A photograph, a letter or a collage that expresses what you’re hopeful about
Here are the rules and guidelines , and here is a guide that includes four steps to figuring out what you want to say and how you would like to say it, with inspiration from 31 teen-created works across genres.
Nov. 6-Dec. 4, 2024
My Tiny Memoir: Our 100-Word Personal Narrative Contest
What story from your life can you tell in just 100 words? Based on the storytelling form popularized by Modern Love’s Tiny Love Stories , we invite you to write a miniature personal narrative about a meaningful life experience.
Here are the rules and guidelines. For more inspiration, read the work of last year’s winners , or follow this step-by-step guide for participating .
Dec. 4, 2024-Jan. 15, 2025
Where We Are: Photo Essays About Community
Inspired by the immersive New York Times series Where We Are , which focuses on young people and the spaces where they create community, we invite students to work alone or with others to make photo essays about the communities that interest them.
You can document any kind of offline community you like and feature people of any age. Then tell us about it by sending six to eight images with captions and a short introduction.
Here are the rules and guidelines. For more inspiration, see the work of last year’s winners , or follow this step-by-step guide for participating .
Jan. 15-Feb. 12, 2025
New! My List: A Different Kind of Review Contest
Three Novels That Have Great Teenage Characters Four Sci-Fi Movies That Even People Who Hate Sci-Fi Will Love The Five Worst Fast Food Sandwiches
Choose any collection of three to five works of art or culture to group in some way, and then tell us, in 600 words or fewer, why we should — or shouldn’t — check them out.
You can work alone or with others and can make lists about any category of creative expression The Times covers, whether books, movies, restaurants, albums, theatrical productions, video games, dances, TV shows, architecture or art exhibitions.
Here are the rules and guidelines. Before the contest opens, we will be publishing a step-by-step guide for participating.
Feb. 12-March 12, 2025
‘ How to …’: An Informational Writing Contest
Following the example of the long-running Tip column from The New York Times Magazine, write a short description of how to do (almost) any task in 400 words or fewer.
As long as your topic is appropriate for a family newspaper, you can explain whatever you like, including tasks that Tip has already taken on. But you must find, interview and quote one expert on the subject throughout your piece.
Here are the rules and guidelines. For more inspiration, read the work of last year’s winners , or follow this step-by-step guide for participating.
March 12-April 16, 2025
Open Letters: Our Opinion Writing Contest
What bothers you? Who could do something about it?
In the tradition of Martin Luther King Jr.’s Letter From Birmingham Jail and the open letters you can find in the Opinion section of The New York Times, we invite you to write a letter of protest or appeal, in 500 words or fewer, to a person or group who can make a change on an issue that matters to you. While your letter should address a specific audience, its real purpose is to be read by — and to influence — the general public.
April 16-May 14, 2025
Audio Stories: Our Podcast Contest
Make an original podcast of five minutes or less that informs or entertains listeners. You can create a podcast on any topic you like in any format you like, whether that’s an interview with an expert, an informal conversation with a friend, a journalistic investigation, a fictional story or anything else you can think of.
Here are the rules and guidelines. For inspiration, listen to the work of past winners and visit the related writing unit .
June 6-Aug. 15, 2025
Voice and Choice: Our Summer Reading Contest
Every week for 10 weeks during the summer we’ll be asking: What got your attention in The Times, and why? Each week students can enter by submitting a short written response — or they can make a video up to 90 seconds long.
Here are last year’s rules and guidelines . For inspiration, read the work of past winners and visit the related writing unit .
All School Year
Our Conversation Challenge for Weekly Current Events
We invite students to react to the news via our daily writing prompts , and each week, we publish a selection of their comments in a roundup for the world to read . We will also give a shout-out to new schools that join the conversation.
A Few More Details About Our Contests
Why do we run so many contests? We believe in student voice. We want young people to be active content creators, not just consumers. And we’re proud to offer places where they can create for an authentic audience of students, teachers, parents and other readers from around the world.
Here are more details:
On the day each contest begins, we will add a link here, on this page, to the contest announcement so students can submit entries. We will also link to all related materials as they are published.
The work students send us is always considered by our staff and other experts , including Times journalists, as well as educators from partner organizations or professional practitioners in a related field. Judging for our contests is blind. That means we see only the entries themselves, not student names or schools, when we make our decisions.
We announce finalists about two months after a contest has closed and winners get their work published on The Learning Network. We usually celebrate dozens of winners, runners-up and honorable mentions each time.
Students’ entries must be original and fundamentally their own. They must not be plagiarized, written by someone else or generated by artificial intelligence. They also should not have been published elsewhere at the time of submission, including in a school newspaper, on a radio station’s website or in a literary magazine.
Anyone who submits to our contests retains the copyright for the work, even after we publish it.
Students can enter as many contests as they want, but they can submit only one entry per contest. Our Summer Reading Contest, however, offers a fresh opportunity to submit each week for 10 weeks.
Entries for most contests must be accompanied by a statement describing your process. We are interested in how you made what you made, and your comments help us improve our offerings.
All of our contests are open to students around the world ages 13 to 19 who are in middle school or high school. Age is determined by the student’s age at the time of submission. College students cannot submit entries. However, high school students (including high school postgraduate students) who are taking one or more college classes can participate. Students attending their first year of a two-year CEGEP in Quebec can also participate. In addition, students ages 19 or under who have completed high school but are taking a gap year or are otherwise not enrolled in college can participate. Note: The children and stepchildren of New York Times employees are not eligible to enter these contests, nor are students who live in the same household as those employees.
Want to make sure you never miss a contest announcement? Sign up for our free weekly newsletter , or follow us on Facebook .
We can’t wait to see what you’ll create this year!
*** Enter the $2,000 College Transitions No Essay Scholarship Contest ***
25 Best Writing Competitions for High School Students – 2024
April 12, 2024
Over the past several years, the number of college applicants has been steadily rising. [i] As college admissions become more competitive, there are many steps a student can take to achieve high school success and become an outstanding candidate for college admissions: earning high SAT scores, securing strong letters of recommendation , and participating in various competitions will all boost your admissions prospects. [ii] In particular, writing competitions for high school students are a popular way to win scholarships and prize money, receive feedback on writing, build a portfolio of public work, and add to college application credentials!
Below, we’ve selected twenty-five writing competitions for high school students and sorted them by three general topics: 1) language, literature and arts, 2) STEM, environment and sustainability, and 3) politics, history and philosophy. It’s never too soon to begin thinking about your future college prospects, and even if you are a freshman, many of these writing competitions for high schoolers will be open to you! [iii]
Writing Competitions for High School Students in Language, Literature, and Arts
1) adroit prizes for poetry and prose.
This prestigious creative writing award offers high school students the opportunity to showcase their work in Adroit Journal . Judges are acclaimed writers in their respective genres.
- Eligibility: All high school students (including international students) are eligible to apply. Poetry contestants may submit up to five poems. Prose contestants may submit up to three pieces of fiction or nonfiction writing (for a combined total of 3,500 words – excerpts accepted).
- Prize: Winners will receive $200 and their writing will be published in Adroit Journal . All submitted entries will be considered for publication!
- Deadline: May 1st (specific deadline may vary by year).
2) Atlas Shrugged Essay Contest
This unique essay competition allows writers the chance to explore and respond to Ayn Rand’s fascinating and polemic 1957 novel Atlas Shrugged . Specific essay topics are posted every three months; prizes are granted seasonally with a grand prize winner announced every year.
- Prize: Annual grand prize is $25,000.
- Deadline: Deadlines occur every season, for each seasonal prompt.
- Eligibility: Essays must be written in English and be 800-1,600 words in length.
Writing Competitions for High School Students (Continued)
3) the bennington young writers awards.
Through Bennington College, this high school writing competition offers three prizes in three different genre categories: poetry, fiction, and nonfiction. Winners and finalists who decide to attend Bennington College will ultimately receive a substantial scholarship prize.
- Eligibility: U.S. and international students in grades 9 through 12 may apply.
- Prize: First place winners receive $1,000; second place wins $500; third place winners receive $250. YWA winners who apply, are admitted, and enroll at Bennington receive a $15,000 scholarship per year (for a total of $60,000). YWA finalists who apply, are admitted, and enroll at Bennington will receive a $10,000 scholarship per year (for a total of $40,000).
- Deadline: The competition runs annually from September 1st to November 1st.
4) Jane Austen Society of North America (JASNA) Student Essay Contest
Do you love Jane Austen? If so, this is the high school writing competition for you! With the JASNA Student Essay Contest, high school students have the opportunity to write a six to eight-page essay about Jane Austen’s works, focused on a specific, designated topic for the competition year.
- Eligibility: Any high school student (homeschooled students also eligible) enrolled during the contest year may submit an essay.
- Prize: First place winner receives a $1,000 scholarship and two nights’ lodging for the upcoming annual JASNA meeting. Second place wins a $500 scholarship and third place wins a $250 scholarship. All winners will additionally receive a year membership in JASNA, the online publication of their article, and a set of Norton Critical Editions of Jane Austen’s novels.
- Deadline: Submission accepted from February-June 1st (specific dates may vary by year).
5) The Kennedy Center VSA Playwright Discovery Program
Young aspiring writers with disabilities are encouraged to apply to this unique program. Students are asked to submit a ten-minute play script that explores any topic, including the student’s own disability experience.
- Eligibility: U.S. and international high school students with disabilities ages 14-19 may apply.
- Prize: Multiple winners will receive exclusive access to professional development and networking opportunities at The Kennedy Center.
- Deadline: January (specific deadline date may vary by year).
6) Leonard M. Milburg ’53 High School Poetry Prize
Through Princeton’s Lewis Center for the Arts, this prestigious writing competition for high school students recognizes outstanding poetry writing and is judged by creative writing faculty at Princeton University.
- Eligibility: U.S. or international students in the eleventh grade may apply. Applicants may submit up to three poems.
- Prize: First place wins $1,500; second place wins $750; third place wins $500.
- Deadline: November (specific deadline date may vary by year).
7) Nancy Thorp Poetry Contest
Nancy Thorp was a student at Hollins University who showed great promise as a poet. After her death, her family established this scholarship to support budding young poets.
- Eligibility: Female high school sophomores and juniors are eligible to apply. Applicants must be U.S. citizens.
- Prize: First place wins $350 and publication in Cargoes literary magazine, along with a $5,000 renewable scholarship (up to $20,000 over four years) if the student enrolls in Hollins University, and free tuition and housing for Hollins University’s summer creative writing program (grades 9-12). Second place wins publication in Cargoes, along with a $1,000 renewable scholarship ($4,000 over four years) if the student enrolls at Hollins and $500 to apply toward Hollins’ summer creative writing program.
- Deadline: October (specific deadline date may vary by year).
8) National Council of Teachers of English Achievement Awards in Writing
Students may be nominated by their English teachers to win this prestigious writing award. Winners “exhibit the power to inform and move an audience through language” and prompts and genres may vary by competition year.
- Prize: A certificate will be awarded to students who are judged to have exceptional writing skills. Student names will be displayed on the NCTE website.
- Eligibility: U.S. high school sophomores and juniors are eligible for nomination.
- Deadline: February (specific dates may vary by year). Contest prompts released in August.
9) National Scholastic Art and Writing Awards
At Scholastic Art and Writing Awards, numerous opportunities for scholarships and awards await those who submit writing in various genres: literary criticism, drama, poetry, and fiction. In all, there are 28 generic categories of art and writing to choose from!
- Eligibility: Teens in grades 7-12 (ages 13 and up) may apply.
- Prize: Various types of recognition and scholarships (up to $12,500) are offered for these award winners.
- Deadline: Scholastic Awards opens for entries in September; deadlines range from December to January.
10) National Society of High School Scholars Creative Writing Scholarship
In this creative writing competition for high schoolers, students have the opportunity to submit a piece poetry or fiction (or both – one in each category!) for the opportunity to be published on the NSHSS website and win a monetary prize.
- Eligibility: Rising high school students graduating in 2024, 2025, 2026 and 2027 may apply.
- Prize: There will be three $2,000 awards for the fiction category and three $2,000 awards for the poetry category.
- Deadline: Submissions Accepted from May to October (specific dates may vary by year).
11) National Writing Award: The Humanities and a Freer Tomorrow
This writing competition allows high school students the chance to be nominated by a teacher for a piece of writing in response to Ruth J. Simmons’ “Facing History to Find a Better Future.” Specific prompt topics may vary by year.
- Eligibility: Nominating teachers can submit work from 11th and 12th graders in one category (fiction, poetry, prose, or essay).
- Prize: One top prize of $1,000. Four additional prizes of $500 each. Winners will have the opportunity to have their work published by NCTE.
- Deadline: Applications are open September to October (specific dates may vary by year).
12) New York Public Library Young Lions Fiction Award
Although this prestigious award isn’t exclusively for high schoolers (anyone younger than 35 may submit a work of fiction), if you’ve written a collection of short stories or even a novel, you should certainly consider applying!
- Eligibility: Any writer below the age of 35 may submit a novel or collection of short stories to participate in this competition.
- Prize: $10,000 award.
- Deadline: September (specific date may vary by year).
13) Princeton University Ten-Minute Play Contest
This writing competition for high school students awards three annual top prizes for the best ten-minute play. Play submissions are judged each year by an acclaimed guest playwright.
- Eligibility: U.S. or international students in the eleventh grade may apply. Students may submit one play entry; entries must be ten pages or less. Plays must be written in English.
- Prize: First place prize is $500; second place is $250; third place is $100.
- Deadline: Varies by year. However, students are recommended to submit before the deadline date – the submission portal will close when a maximum of 250 applicants have applied.
14) YouthPLAYS New Voices One-Act Competition for Young Playwrights
In this exciting writing competition, students have the chance to submit an original play script for a play of around 10-40 minutes in length. An excellent competition choice for any student considering a future in the theatre!
- Eligibility: Prospective authors ages 19 and under may submit a script for consideration in the competition. See specific writing guidelines here .
- Prize: First prize wins $250 and publication with YouthPLAYS; second prize wins $100.
- Deadline: Submissions run from January 1st to May 1st.
STEM, Environment, and Sustainability High School Writing Competitions
15) engineergirl essay contest.
This wonderful essay contest invites students to explore topics related to engineering and science. Each year a new, specific prompt will be chosen for young writers who wish to compete.
- Eligibility: High school students are eligible to apply. Previous winners and close family members of employees of the National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine are not eligible.
- Prize: First place winners receive $1,000; second place receives $750; third place receives $500.
- Deadline: Competition opens in September and submissions are due February 1st of the following year. Winners are announced in the summer.
16) Ocean Awareness Contest
The Ocean Awareness Contest is an opportunity for students to create written and artistic projects that explore sustainability, environmentalism, and positive change. High school freshmen (up to age 14) may apply to the Junior Division. Students ages 15-18 may enter the Senior Division.
- Eligibility: Students ages 11-18 may apply (international students included).
- Prize: Monetary prizes ranging from $100-$1000 will be awarded each year. Additionally, $500 will be awarded to ten students who identify as Black, Indigenous, or Latino via the We All Rise Prize program.
- Deadline: June 10, 2024 (specific deadline may vary by year).
17) Rachel Carson Intergenerational Sense of Wonder / Sense of Wild Contest
If you are interested in issues of sustainability, environment, biology and the natural world, this is one of the high school writing competitions that is just for you! Essay prompts explore the natural world and our place within it and may include poetry, essays, and photography.
- Eligibility: Students must pair with an adult from a different generation (e.g. parent, grandparent or teacher – contestants need not be related). Entries must be submitted as a team.
- Prize: Winners will receive a certificate from RCLA; their first names, ages, and entry titles will be posted on the RCLA website.
- Deadline: November 16th, 2024 (specific deadline may vary by year).
18) River of Words Competition
This writing competition for high school students is another top choice for those thinking of pursuing majors or careers in biology, environment, and sustainability; this specific contest hopes to promote positive education in sustainability by “promoting environmental literacy through the arts and cultural exchange.”
- Eligibility: Any U.S. or international student from kindergarten through 12th grade may apply.
- Prize: Winners will be published in the River of Words
- Deadline: January (specific deadline may vary by year).
Writing Competitions for High School Students in Politics, History and Philosophy
19) american foreign service association essay contest.
With this writing competition for high school students, entrants may submit essays ranging from 1,000-1,500 words about diplomacy, history, and international politics (specific prompts vary by year).
- Eligibility: Students in grades nine through twelve may apply. Students whose parents are in the Foreign Service Association are not eligible.
- Prize: The first-place winner will receive $2,500, an all-expense paid trip to Washington, D.C. for the winner and the winner’s parents, and an all-expense paid voyage via Semester at Sea. The second-place winner receives $1,250 and full tuition for a summer session at the National Student Leadership Conference’s International Diplomacy program.
- Deadline: Early spring (specific deadline may vary by year).
20) Bill of Rights Institute We the Students Essay Contest
In this writing competition for high school students, civic-minded U.S. high schoolers may explore the principles and virtues of the Bill of Rights Institute. Interested applicants should review the specific submission guidelines .
- Eligibility: Any high school student aged 13 to 19 may apply.
- Prize: Prizes range from $1,500 to $10,000.
- Deadline: Submissions for 2024 due May 19th (specific deadline may vary by year).
21) JFK Presidential Library and Museum Profile in Courage Essay Contest
For students interested in history and political science, this competition offers the chance to write about U.S. elected officials who have demonstrated political courage.
- Eligibility: U.S. high school students from grades 9-12 may apply.
- Prize: First prize is $10,000; second prize receives $3,000; five finalists receive $1,000 each; ten semifinalists receive $100 each; eight students receive honorable mention.
- Deadline: Submissions accepted from September to January (specific deadline may vary by year).
- Sample Essays: 2000-2023 Contest Winner Essays
22) John Locke Institute Essay Competition
This essay competition is for students who would like to write about and cultivate “independent thought, depth of knowledge, clear reasoning, critical analysis and persuasive style” from one of seven intellectual categories: philosophy, politics, economics, history, psychology, theology or law.
- Eligibility: Students from any country may submit an essay.
- Prize: $2,000 for each subject category winner toward a John Locke Institute program; winning essays will be published on the Institute’s website.
- Deadline: Registration must be completed by May 31st, 2024; essay submission due June 30th, 2024 (specific deadline may vary by year).
23) Society of Professional Journalists and the Journalism Education Association Essay Contest
This exciting writing competition for high schoolers allows students to explore topics related to journalism, democracy and media literacy. Specific prompts will be provided for contestants each year.
- Eligibility: All U.S. students from grades 9-12 may submit original writing to participate in this contest.
- Prize: First-place winners will receive $1,000; second place is awarded $500; third place receives $300.
- Deadline: February (specific deadline may vary by year).
24) Veterans of Foreign Wars Voice of Democracy Youth Scholarship Essay
This audio essay allows high school students the opportunity to “express themselves in regards to a democratic and patriot-themed recorded essay.” One winner will be granted a $35,000 scholarship to be paid toward their university, college, or vocational school of choice. Smaller prizes range from $1,000-$21,000, and the first-place winner in each VFW state wins $1,000.
- Prize: College scholarships range from $1,000-$35,000
- Eligibility: U.S. students in grades 9-12 may submit a 3-5-minute audio essay.
- Deadline: October 31st
- Sample Written Essay: 2023-2024 Prize-winning essay by Sophia Lin
25) World Historian Student Essay Competition
The World Historian Student Essay Competition recognizes young scholars who explore world historical events and how they relate to the student scholar personally. Ultimately the student writer must describe “the experience of being changed by a better understanding of world history.”
- Eligibility: Internationally, students ages K-12 may submit an entry. See specific prompt and submission guidelines for writing instructions.
- Prize: $500
Writing Competitions for High School Students – Sources
[i] Institute for Education Sciences: National Center for Education Statistics. “Number of applications for admission from first-time, degree/certificate-seeking undergraduate students were received by postsecondary institutions in the fall.” https://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/TrendGenerator/app/answer/10/101
[ii] Jaschik, Scott. “Record Applications, Record Rejections.” Inside Higher Ed . 3 April 2022. https://www.insidehighered.com/admissions/article/2022/04/04/most-competitive-colleges-get-more-competitive
[iii] Wood, Sarah. “College Applications are on the Rise: What to Know.” U.S. News & World Report. 21 June 2022. https://www.usnews.com/education/best-colleges/articles/college-applications-are-on-the-rise-what-to-know
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Jamie Smith
For the past decade, Jamie has taught writing and English literature at several universities, including Boston College, the University of Pittsburgh, and Carnegie Mellon University. She earned a Ph.D. in English from Carnegie Mellon, where she currently teaches courses and conducts research on composition, public writing, and British literature.
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Nov 5, 2024 · World Historian Student Essay Competition. The World Historian Student Essay Competition is an international contest open to students enrolled in grades K through 12 in public, private, and parochial schools, as well as those in home-study programs. The $500 prize is based on an essay that addresses one of this year’s two prompts. How To Enter
Jul 25, 2024 · Students can enter as many contests as they want, but they can submit only one entry per contest. Our Summer Reading Contest, however, offers a fresh opportunity to submit each week for 10 weeks.
Apr 9, 2024 · The array of essay writing contests available to students in 2024 offers a broad platform for expression, innovation, and scholarship. Students across the United States are invited to apply their creativity and insight, not only in essay form but also through poetry, offering a free and expansive space for artistic exploration.
The Harvard Crimson Global Essay Competition provides a platform for young, ambitious high school students to exercise their writing skills and compete with students from all over the world! This competition encourages students to challenge themselves and explore different writing styles to ultimately strengthen their writing skills.
6. American Foreign Service National High School Essay Contest. For those who’re seeking to assist college students take a deep dive into worldwide relations, historical past, and writing, look no additional than this essay contest. Winners obtain a voyage with the Semester at Sea program and a visit to Washington, D.C. How To Enter
Apr 12, 2024 · Writing Competitions for High School Students (Continued) 20) Bill of Rights Institute We the Students Essay Contest. In this writing competition for high school students, civic-minded U.S. high schoolers may explore the principles and virtues of the Bill of Rights Institute. Interested applicants should review the specific submission guidelines.