National Student Media Contests

Registration for the spring 2024 NSMC in Kansas City will open Feb. 5, 2024. 

Online contest submissions can be submitted Feb. 5 through March 11. All submissions must be entered by 6 p.m. CST, Monday, March 11, 2024.

For your record keeping, use the NSMC contest tracker in Google Sheets to assign students to contests and manage online entry submissions. Go to the File menu, then select Make a Copy or Download to record your student assignments.

It is imperative that advisers and contestants carefully read all the rules to make sure all deadlines and requirements are met.

What is being judged is not just the entry itself, but the contestant’s ability to read and follow directions, meet deadlines, and develop the necessary skills to produce a winning entry.

PARTICIPATION REQUIREMENTS:

  • Contestants must be paid attendees at the convention.
  • For Contests 36-39, only one member of the team is required to be present at the convention.*
  • Junior high/middle school students may enter any contest.
  • A student may enter only one category.
  • Each school is limited to one entry per category.
  • The journalism teacher/adviser must be a current JEA member for the students to participate in the contests.
  • Advisers requesting special accommodations for students with disabilities must do so by the registration deadline and bring documentation (IEP/504) to the convention.
  • All contests require students to bring their own supplies.
  • No late entries will be accepted.

Entry fee: $20 per student *In team contests, each student on the team must be registered and paid.

Payment is due by the Friday of the convention. Payment may be submitted through the online contest system or checks may be hand carried to the convention.

Contest Rules and Policies

(APPLIES TO ALL CONTESTS)

Writing Contests: One student per school may enter each contest
News Layout Contests: One student per school may enter each contest
Press Law and Ethics: One student per school may enter
Yearbook Contests: One student per school may enter each contest
Literary Magazine Contests: One student per school may enter each contest
Graphic Design Contests: One student per school may enter each contest
Photography Contests: One student per school may enter each contest
Broadcast Contests: Some contests allow team entries

CONTEST RULES & POLICIES

Special note about online submissions

  • If, as the deadline approaches, a student realizes he/she will not be able to meet the upload deadline, the student may switch to an on-site category as long as no one else in the school is in that category. Advisers may go into the contest registration area and make the switch. This must be done by the deadline.
  • Students who do not upload their online contest entries by the deadline will be disqualified. No refunds will be given unless the adviser calls and withdraws the student no later than 14 days before the first day of the convention. The student will not be able to switch to another contest at this time.
  • JEA staff is available to assist with any technical difficulties encountered while getting entries submitted to the media contest website, and to consult with advisers and students to advise them in getting their entry prepared for upload. All work on the entry must be done by the student.

Convention and competition

  • Advisers must pick up the Contestant ID labels at the contest desk during regular registration hours before 10:30 a.m. Friday.  A lost Contestant ID will be replaced only if the contestant is on the school's original NSMC contest list and shows their photo ID and convention name badge. Replacements are available until 3 p.m. Friday.
  • Name substitutions and spelling changes may be made during registration hours until 10:30 a.m. Friday at the contest desk. Categories may not be changed.
  • Contestant ID labels must be presented in order to compete. Students who arrive at their contest after the start time will not get additional time and may be disqualified.
  • Visitors are not allowed in the contest rooms.
  • Results are final when contest judging closes.
  • If any contestant’s name, school name or identifying mark is mentioned or implied, the entry will be disqualified with few exceptions: photo and graphic design entries in which a school identification appears incidentally as part of a picture; broadcast categories where names of contestants may be used. Online News Package is also exempt.
  • Students are responsible for bringing all contest supplies required for the competition including paper and writing utensils. No materials will be supplied by JEA. Each contest has specific rules concerning the items allowed, so it is imperative that students carefully read the rules for their specific contest ahead of time.
  • No talking to other contestants is allowed other than in critique sessions. The lead judge can answer any questions.
  • Each contest has a lead judge who will run the contest session, distribute the prompts and collect all material. Students who continue to work after time is up may be disqualified.
  • Online submission contests require contestants to attend on-site critique sessions. Students must be present for the entire session or entries will be disqualified.
  • All entries must follow all federal laws regarding copyright.

Judging and awards

  • Each entry is critiqued by a minimum of two judges. Judges may not evaluate entries from their own schools.
  • Judges will provide written comments on the entry critique sheet or in the NSMC system. The critique sheets and comments in the critique sessions are not the only basis for how the entry is judged for the final awards. Judges take all the entries into consideration when assigning final awards. High marks and positive comments do not necessarily mean an award will be given.
  • If an entry indicates that the student is a danger to themself or others, the contest chair is obligated to inform the JEA executive director and a representative of the school. If such an entry is found to be a hoax, the entry will be disqualified, the JEA executive director will be notified, and the school may face other disciplinary action.
  • The JEA contest chair and JEA executive director and/or assistant director will make all final decisions regarding contests.
  • Winners receive a certificate and are recognized at the JEA awards ceremony. The ratings are Superior, Excellent and Honorable Mention. Superiors, which also are awarded with a medal, are generally given to no more than 10 percent of the entries in any contest. Judges may give as many ratings in Excellent and Honorable Mention as they choose.
  • Entries may be broadcast, displayed or published in JEA publications or on its affiliated websites. Entries also may be shared with the site or speakers who provided subject material. Winners’ names and schools will be published on the JEA website.
  • Onsite entries are available for pick up at the awards ceremony. Online entry critiques will be posted within 24 hours after the awards ceremony has concluded. Unclaimed packets with entries and awards will be mailed to the school.

WRITING CONTESTS

All writing contests are for individuals only.

01: NEWSWRITING

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will listen to a 30-minute presentation. After a 15-minute question-and-answer period, write a news story that is no more than 350 words. It must be completed on your own 8.5-by-11-inch lined paper in ink. Follow the directions given on the prompt sheet and by the lead judge. You will be able to use information from the presentation and provided on the prompt.

SUPPLIES NEEDED: Pen (erasable ink acceptable), 8.5-by-11-inch lined paper. Optional: correction fluid, eraser, voice recorder (you may use a cellphone) with earphones, electronic spell checkers, dictionary, thesaurus, Associated Press Stylebook. If you will be using a reference application on your cellphone (dictionary, thesaurus AP Stylebook ONLY) you must ask for permission and set your phone on the table where the moderators can see it.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

News writing style; informative lead hooks readers; use of facts instead of generalizations; use of direct quotes; pinpointing the news in the presentation and highlighting it with an effective angle; concise writing with good use of detail and description, well-organized story flow; accuracy; completeness; elimination of extraneous material; elimination of libelous statements; knowledge of AP style rules; few convention errors.

02: EDITORIAL WRITING

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will read several provided material sources on a contemporary topic. Using that information and your own knowledge of the topic, write an editorial that is no more than 350 words. It must be completed on your own 8.5-by-11-inch lined paper in ink. Follow the directions given on the prompt sheet and by the lead judge. The editorial would be an unsigned staff editorial for a high school newspaper. Editorials are written in third person to represent an editorial board's opinion. You will not be allowed to do any additional research, so some knowledge of current events would be beneficial.

SUPPLIES NEEDED: Pen (erasable ink acceptable), 8.5-by-11-inch lined paper. Optional: correction fluid, eraser, voice recorder (you may use a cellphone) with earphones, electronic spell checkers, dictionary, thesaurus, Associated Press Stylebook. If you will be using a reference application on your cellphone (dictionary, thesaurus AP Stylebook ONLY) you must ask for permission and set your phone on the table where the moderators can see it.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Persuasive leads that come quickly to an assertion; focus on a single, manageable proposition; clear purpose; editorial format for lead, body, conclusion; opposing arguments refuted; facts to support assertion in the lead; arguments fully developed; effective organization and transitions; strong conclusion; accuracy; completeness; elimination of extraneous material and libelous statements; knowledge of AP style rules; few convention errors; third-person voice. Contestants should not use any reference to their school or publication.

03: FEATURE WRITING

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will listen to a 30-minute presentation. After a 15-minute question-and-answer period, write a feature story that is no more than 350 words. It must be completed on your own 8.5-by-11-inch lined paper in ink. Follow the directions given on the prompt sheet and by the lead judge. You will be able to use information from the presentation and provided on the prompt.

SUPPLIES NEEDED: Pen (erasable ink acceptable), 8.5-by-11-inch lined paper. Optional: correction fluid, eraser, voice recorder (you may use a cellphone) with earphones, electronic spell checkers, dictionary, thesaurus, Associated Press Stylebook. If you will be using a reference application on your cellphone (dictionary, thesaurus AP Stylebook ONLY) you must ask for permission and set your phone on the table where the moderators can see it.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Attention-grabbing lead; feature style as opposed to news style; colorful details; liberal use of direct quotes and anecdotes without stating the obvious; objective and fair; copy that appeals to the readers’ interest; writing evokes emotional response; accuracy; completeness; elimination of extraneous material; clear focus of the news peg; few convention errors; avoids passive voice; avoids cliches; variety of sentence beginnings; elimination of libelous statements and knowledge of AP style rules; few convention errors.

04: SPORTS WRITING

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will listen to a presentation of no more than 30 minutes. After a 15-minute question-and-answer period, write a sports story that is no more than 350 words. It must be completed on your own 8.5-by-11-inch lined paper in ink. Follow the directions given on the prompt sheet and by the lead judge. You will be able to use information from the presentation and provided on the prompt.

SUPPLIES NEEDED: Pen (erasable ink acceptable), 8.5-by-11-inch lined paper. Optional: correction fluid, eraser, voice recorder (you may use a cellphone) with earphones, electronic spell checkers, dictionary, thesaurus, Associated Press Stylebook. If you will be using a reference application on your cellphone (dictionary, thesaurus AP Stylebook ONLY) you must ask for permission and set your phone on the table where the moderators can see it.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Attention-grabbing lead; if story is a feature, the lead should be a feature lead; good story flow with effective transitions; colorful details; evokes emotional impact; use of informative direct quotes; accuracy; completeness; elimination of extraneous material; elimination of libelous statements and knowledge of AP style rules; few convention errors.

05: REVIEW WRITING

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will watch a 30-minute presentation — a one-act play, dramatic reading, dance, music, film, video — or visit a location close to the convention site. There may be an opportunity for a question-and-answer period. Write a review that is no more than 350 words. It must be completed on your own 8.5-by-11-inch lined paper in ink. Follow the directions given on the prompt sheet and by the lead judge. You will be able to use information from the presentation and provided on the prompt.

This contest may require students to leave the convention hotel to compete. They will be accompanied by JEA contest chaperones.

SUPPLIES NEEDED: Pen (erasable ink acceptable), 8.5-by-11-inch lined paper. Optional: correction fluid, eraser, voice recorder (you may use a cellphone) with earphones, electronic spell checkers, dictionary, thesaurus, Associated Press Stylebook. If you will be using a reference application on your cellphone (dictionary, thesaurus AP Stylebook ONLY) you must ask for permission and set your phone on the table where the moderators can see it.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Persuasive lead that quickly reaches assertion and/or attention-grabbing lead; clear expression of opinions; strengths and weaknesses of event or performance are clearly noted; strong, effective voice; opinions supported with details and examples; use of colorful details; well-organized story flow with good transitions; facts rather than generalizations; avoids cliche; extraneous information and libelous statements eliminated; demonstrates knowledge of AP style rules; few convention errors.

06: EDITORIAL CARTOONING

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will read several provided material sources on a contemporary topic. Draw an editorial cartoon by hand following the directions given on the prompt sheet and by the lead judge. Artists may use any color/thickness of pencil, pen and/or marker for their cartoon. Submit the final copy on your own plain 8.5-by-11-inch white paper. No cellphones may be used to reference images.

SUPPLIES NEEDED: Plain 8.5-by-11-inch white paper, scratch paper, sharpened pencils, any color pens and/or markers of varying thickness, correction fluid, eraser. No cellphones. Optional: ruler.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

A simple and clear editorial statement; evidence of artistic ability; a novel approach; absence of trite and melodramatic imagery; wit; effective conveyance of a message; quality of drawing; simplicity of line.

07: COMMENTARY WRITING

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

Commentary is used for a column written from a well-supported personal point-of-view. You will read several provided material sources on a contemporary topic. Knowledge of current events is beneficial in this contest. Write a commentary that is no more than 350 words. It must be completed on your own 8.5-by-11-inch lined paper in ink. following the instructions from the moderator. You may not make up or use additional facts or quotes from sources other than those provided to you. Follow the directions given on the prompt sheet and by the lead judge. Contestants need to be careful not to make any reference to their schools or publications.

SUPPLIES NEEDED: Pen (erasable ink acceptable), 8.5-by-11-inch lined paper. Optional: correction fluid, eraser, voice recorder (you may use a cellphone) with earphones, electronic spell checkers, dictionary, thesaurus, Associated Press Stylebook. If you will be using a reference application on your cellphone (dictionary, thesaurus AP Stylebook only) you must ask for permission and set your phone on the table where the moderators can see it.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Writer’s opinion is clear; background information used accurately and purposefully; does not ignore or distort facts; addresses the high school audience; writer makes good use of provided material sources; voice of the commentary encourages the reader to think about the subject in a new light; first person is used effectively; follows AP style; few errors in conventions.

08: NEWS EDITING / HEADLINE WRITING / CURRENT EVENTS

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will be given a test that will assess your basic copy-editing skills, your knowledge of current events, politics and newsworthy people. You will write headlines for two stories. Please use ink. The total time for the contest, including passing out materials and giving instructions, is two hours. You will not be allowed to use cellphones or any additional resources.

SUPPLIES NEEDED: Pens (erasable ink acceptable), sharpened pencils. Optional: correction fluid, eraser.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Knowledge of Associated Press style rules; knowledge of correct spelling, grammar and punctuation; sufficient knowledge of current events, geopolitics, contemporary topics and newsworthy people to recognize inaccuracies and mistakes; headlines that are spelled correctly; and headlines that reflect content of the story.

Top


NEWS DESIGN CONTESTS

09: NEWSPAPER LAYOUT (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

Prepare materials before the convention and upload a PDF to the NSMC site. The day NSMC registration opens, the contest prompt and materials, including downloadable photos, will be available. Be careful that you do not download the material for the prior convention. All contestants must attend the mandatory critique session at the convention or the entry will be disqualified.

This is a general overview of the contest. Read all of the instructions/rules on the prompt carefully.

Use any software available to you to design a front page in black-and-white or color, using any grid or column format you choose and the size template your newspaper uses (i.e. tabloid, broadsheet).

You will design a flag/nameplate and all the page elements you choose to cover the topic(s) provided on the prompt. Only use the Contest 9 photos, stories and information for this convention's contest.

You will use placeholder text for the copy blocks and captions, but you will write headlines. You may create your own pull quotes, illustrations and/or infographics.

Other than provided material, do all of your own work on every aspect of this layout. Entries that use images or material other than what JEA provides and/or original artwork by the contestant will be disqualified.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Clean layout; creativity; effective positioning of the elements; effective selection, scaling and cropping of photos; effective font choices and sizes; varied headline sizes; a clear focal point; text flow easy to follow; evidence of consideration for readers; consistent use of styles; creative graphics; a sense of personality or style.

HELPFUL LINKS

Download contest prompt and materials

Preparing layout entries

10: NEWSMAGAZINE LAYOUT (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

Prepare materials before the convention and upload one PDF file to the NSMC site. The entry must be saved in two-page view (facing pages). Entries that are submitted in a format that is not a two-page view will be critiqued but will NOT be eligible for an award. Instructions and rules appear on the contest prompt and materials which are available on the day NSMC registration opens.

With software available to you, design the designated center spread and the cover for a newsmagazine according to the directions given to you from the JEA website. The day NSMC registration opens, the contest materials, including downloadable photos, will be available. Be careful that you do not download the material for the prior convention. All contestants must attend the mandatory critique session at the convention or the entry will be disqualified.

This is a general overview of the contest. Read all of the instructions/rules on the prompt carefully.

In black-and-white or color, design the front cover and center spread/doubletruck using any grid or column format you like. The center spread must be saved as one spread that is 17 inches wide and 11 inches tall. The cover will be 8.5 by 11 inches.

Only use the Contest 10 photos, stories and information for this convention's contest. You will use placeholder text for the copy blocks and captions, but you will write headlines. You may create your own pull quotes, illustrations and/or infographics.

Other than provided material, do all of your own work on every aspect of this layout. Entries that use images or material other than what JEA provides and/or original artwork by the contestant will be disqualified.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Clean layout; evidence of ability to distinguish importance of stories and photos and to position them accordingly; a focal point; effective display of nameplate with full information; copy blocks, headlines, caption blocks and photos placed effectively; proper selection, cropping and scaling of photos; usage of appropriate headline sizes; consistent use of styles throughout; creative graphics.

HELPFUL LINKS

Download contest prompt and materials

Preparing layout entries


Contest category 11

PRESS LAW AND ETHICS

11: PRESS LAW AND ETHICS

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

Students enter as individuals and take a test that assesses their knowledge and understanding of scholastic press law and ethics. This contest will include either a matching or multiple choice section and short-answer and essay sections covering First Amendment issues, landmark cases and ethical decision-making for members of the scholastic press. Complete the written portion in ink on your own 8.5-by-11-inch lined paper. The total time for the contest, including passing out materials and giving instructions, is two hours. Contestants are not allowed to use a cellphone.

SUPPLIES NEEDED: Pens (erasable ink acceptable). Optional: correction fluid, eraser, electronic spell checkers, dictionary, thesaurus.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Judges will look for a comprehensive understanding of media law and ethics as they apply to the scholastic media. They will also evaluate the contestants’ ability to apply the law and Society of Professional Journalists’ Code of Ethics to situations.


YEARBOOK CONTESTS

12: YEARBOOK COPY/CAPTION: SPORTS

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will be given a fact sheet from which you will write a primary headline, secondary headline, two captions and a copy block of no more than 250 words. There is no limit on the caption length. Additional facts and quotes are included with the photos and caption information. You may intermix the information to make the best copy and captions. You may add description to your story (as if you were an eyewitness), but you may not make up facts or quotes. All these items would appear on a single DPS.

SUPPLIES NEEDED: Pen (erasable ink acceptable). Optional: correction fluid, eraser, electronic spell checkers, dictionary, thesaurus, Associated Press Stylebook. If you will be using a reference application on your cellphone (dictionary, thesaurus AP Stylebook only) you must ask for permission and set your phone on the table where the moderators can see it. No other reference/guidebook materials may be used. For example, no staff manuals or yearbook publisher materials may be used.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Good judgment in fact and quote selections; well-written active-verb copy that appeals to the reader; interesting lead; quotations used correctly and effectively; colorful details; good use of transitions; avoids cliche; original angle, focus; intriguing and inviting headline that reflects the dominant photo and directs reader to the story; minimum two-sentence captions state more than the obvious, are varied in beginnings and add to the body of reader knowledge; correct AP style; contains few convention errors.

13: YEARBOOK COPY/CAPTIONS: ACADEMICS

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will be given a fact sheet from which you will write a primary headline, secondary headline, two captions and a copy block of no more than 250 words. There is no limit on the caption length. Additional facts and quotes are included with the photos and caption information. You may intermix the information to make the best copy and captions. You may add description to your story (as if you were an eyewitness), but you may not make up facts or quotes. All these items would appear on a single DPS.

SUPPLIES NEEDED: Pen (erasable ink acceptable). Optional: correction fluid, eraser, electronic spell checkers, dictionary, thesaurus, Associated Press Stylebook. If you will be using a reference application on your cellphone (dictionary, thesaurus AP Stylebook only you must ask for permission and set your phone on the table where the moderators can see it. No other reference/guidebook materials may be used. For example, no staff manuals or yearbook publisher materials may be used.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Good judgment in fact and quote selections; well-written active-verb copy that appeals to the reader; interesting lead; quotations used correctly and effectively; colorful details; good use of transitions; avoids cliche; original angle, focus; intriguing and inviting headline that reflects the dominant photo and directs reader to the story ; minimum two-sentence captions state more than the obvious, are varied in beginnings and add to the body of reader knowledge; knowledge of AP style; contains few convention errors.

14: YEARBOOK COPY/CAPTIONS: CLUBS

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will be given a fact sheet from which you will write a primary headline, secondary headline, two captions and a copy block of no more than 250 words. There is no limit on the caption length. Additional facts and quotes are included with the photos and caption information. You may intermix the information to make the best copy and captions. You may add description to your story (as if you were an eyewitness), but you may not make up facts or quotes. All these items would appear on a single DPS.

SUPPLIES NEEDED: Pen (erasable ink acceptable). Optional: correction fluid, eraser, electronic spell checkers, dictionary, thesaurus, Associated Press Stylebook. If you will be using a reference application on your cellphone (dictionary, thesaurus AP Stylebook only) you must ask for permission and set your phone on the table where the moderators can see it. No other reference/guidebook materials may be used. For example, no staff manuals or yearbook publisher materials may be used.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Good judgment in fact and quote selections; well-written active-verb copy that appeals to the reader; interesting lead; quotations used correctly and effectively; colorful details; good use of transitions; avoids cliche; original angle, focus; intriguing and inviting headline that reflects the dominant photo and directs reader to the story; minimum two-sentence captions state more than the obvious, are varied in beginnings and add to the body of reader knowledge; knowledge of AP style; contains few convention errors.

15: YEARBOOK COPY/CAPTION: STUDENT LIFE

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will be given a fact sheet from which you will write a primary headline, secondary headline, two captions and a copy block of no more than 250 words. There is no limit on the caption length. Additional facts and quotes are included with the photos and caption information. You may intermix the information to make the best copy and captions. You may add description to your story (as if you were an eyewitness), but you may not make up facts or quotes. All these items would appear on a single DPS.

SUPPLIES NEEDED: Pen (erasable ink acceptable). Optional: correction fluid, eraser, electronic spell checkers, dictionary, thesaurus, Associated Press Stylebook. If you will be using a reference application on your cellphone (dictionary, thesaurus AP Stylebook only) you must ask for permission and set your phone on the table where the moderators can see it. No other reference/guidebook materials may be used. For example, no staff manuals or yearbook publisher materials may be used.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Good judgment in fact and quote selections; well-written active-verb copy that appeals to the reader; interesting lead; quotations used correctly and effectively; colorful details; good use of transitions; avoids cliche; original angle, focus; intriguing and inviting headline that reflects the dominant photo and directs reader to the story; minimum two-sentence captions state more than the obvious, are varied in beginnings and add to the body of reader knowledge; knowledge of AP style; contains few convention errors.

16: YEARBOOK LAYOUT: THEME (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

Prepare materials before the convention and upload a PDF to the NSMC website. The entry must be saved as a facing two-page spread. Entries that are submitted in a format that is not a two-page view will be critiqued but will not be eligible for an award. The day NSMC registration opens, the contest prompt and materials, including downloadable photos, will be available. Be careful that you do not download the material for the prior convention. All contestants must attend the mandatory critique session at the convention or the entry will be disqualified.

This is a general overview of the contest. Read all the instructions/rules on the prompt carefully.

Use your available software and the template size your school uses for its yearbook and any grid/column structure you choose.

In black-and-white or color, design a double-page spread for a division page using the theme/section provided on the prompt. 

You must have a minimum of one block of copy, but multiple copy units are acceptable. You will use placeholder text for copy blocks but you may create your own pull quotes, illustrations and/or infographics. You will write your own headlines. Crop, size and place the photos that are provided as you wish.

Other than the material provided for Contest 16, do all your own work on every aspect of this layout. Entries that use images or material other than what JEA provides and/or original artwork will be disqualified.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Adhering to instructions; designed as a double-page theme spread; impact of photos; adhering to design rules; using dominant photo; effective positioning of headlines, copy and captions; using current design trends; using point sizes for copy, headlines and captions that indicate visual hierarchy and guide reader through page; effectively balancing photos and copy; using creative graphics; effective cropping of photos; including essential layout elements such as page numbers and folio design.

HELPFUL LINKS

Download contest prompt and materials

Preparing layout entries

17: YEARBOOK LAYOUT: INSIDE PAGES (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

Prepare materials before the convention and upload a PDF to the NSMC website. The entry must be saved as a facing two-page spread. Entries that are submitted in a format that is not a two-page view will be critiqued but will NOT be eligible for an award. The day NSMC registration opens, the contest prompt and materials, including downloadable photos, will be available. Be careful that you do not download the material for the prior convention. All contestants must attend the mandatory critique session at the convention or the entry will be disqualified.

This is a general overview of the contest. Read all the instructions/rules on the prompt carefully.

Use your available software and the template size your school uses for its yearbook and any grid/column structure you choose.

In black-and-white or color, design a double-page layout (one spread) for the pages assigned on the prompt and the theme provided using only the photos and information provided.

You must have a minimum of one block of copy, but multiple copy units are acceptable. You will use placeholder text for copy blocks but you may create your own pull quotes, illustrations and/or infographics. You will write your own headlines. Crop, size and place the photos that are provided as you wish.

Other than the material provided for Contest 17, do all your own work on every aspect of this layout. Entries that use images or material other than what JEA provides and/or original artwork will be disqualified.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Adhering to instructions; designed as a double-page spread; using a dominant photo; effective positioning of headlines, copy blocks and captions; using current design trends; adhering to design rules; using effective fonts and point sizes for copy, headlines and captions; adhering to visual hierarchy and guiding reader through the spread; effectively balancing photos and copy blocks; using graphics that add to design; effective cropping of photos; including essential layout elements such as page numbers and folio design.

HELPFUL LINKS

Download contest prompt and materials

Preparing layout entries

18: YEARBOOK COVER/ENDSHEETS (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

Prepare materials before the convention and upload a PDF to the NSMC website. The cover and endsheets must each be saved as facing two-page spreads. Entries that are submitted in formats that are not two-page views will be critiqued but will NOT be eligible for an award. The whole entry must be submitted as a single PDF file. That means both spreads must be combined and saved as ONE PDF for judging.

The day NSMC registration opens, the contest prompt and materials, including downloadable photos, will be available. Be careful that you do not download the material for the prior convention. 

All contestants MUST attend the mandatory critique session at the convention or the entry will be disqualified.

This is a general overview of the contest. Read ALL the instructions/rules on the prompt carefully.

Use your available software and the template size your school uses for its yearbook and any grid/column structure you choose.

In black-and-white or color, design the front and back cover (with a 1-inch-wide spine) and the front and back endsheets that verbally and visually reflect the theme provided on the prompt.

Be sure to include all the elements required on a cover/spine. The endsheets may include a table of contents with spin-off titles from the theme for each section of the book.

Other than the material provided for Contest 18, do all your own work on every aspect of this layout. Entries that use images or material other than what JEA provides and/or original artwork will be disqualified.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Cover and endsheets reflect visual and verbal representation of the theme; design conveys theme; spine includes school name, city and state, volume, year, publication name; cover includes theme, publication name, year; instructions and rules followed; graphics add to theme; effective cropping of photos (if used); creative and visually attractive.

HELPFUL LINKS

Download contest prompt and materials


Preparing layout entries

LITERARY MAGAZINE CONTESTS

19: LITERARY MAGAZINE: LAYOUT (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

Prepare materials before the convention and upload a PDF to the NSMC website. The entry must be saved as a facing two-page spread. Entries that are submitted in a format that is not a two-page view will be critiqued but will not be eligible for an award. The day NSMC registration opens, the contest prompt and materials, including downloadable photos, will be available. Be careful that you do not download the material for the prior convention. All contestants must attend the mandatory critique session at the convention or the entry will be disqualified.

This is a general overview of the contest. Read all the instructions/rules on the prompt carefully.

Use any available software you choose to create a two-page spread for a literary magazine. The pages should be 8 1/2-by-11-inches.

Choose your own design format and any font styles and sizes that you deem appropriate. Align the poems any way you choose, but do not change the poem’s format from the way the author wrote it (line breaks).

Use only the poetry provided on the prompt.

Only use the images provided with the Contest 19 material. No other images may be used, but you may manipulate or edit the images provided.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Clean layout and design relating to selected copy; impact, action or emotion in design; instructions followed; positioning of copy, title, art, photos and captions in relation to each other; use of current graphic trends.

HELPFUL LINKS

Download contest prompt and materials

Preparing layout entries

20: LITERARY MAGAZINE: POETRY

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will write an original poem of 10-30 lines for a literary magazine using the theme provided. Title your poem and clearly indicate your lines through indentation and use of margins. You are to exhibit your understanding of poetry, its conventions, punctuation and potential to create a setting, convey a tone, connect to feelings and to delve beyond the surface.

SUPPLIES NEEDED: Pen (erasable ink acceptable), 8.5-by-11-inch lined paper. Optional: correction fluid, eraser, electronic spell checkers, dictionary, thesaurus, Associated Press Stylebook. If you will be using a reference application on your cellphone (dictionary, thesaurus AP Stylebook only) you must ask for permission and set your phone on the table where the moderators can see it.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Originality and creativity in developing theme, concise writing and word choice. Judges will consider use of concrete language, figurative language and imagery; use of literary devices (simile, metaphor, repetition); cadence, verb tense, and development of tone and mood to create an emotional impact. Few convention errors.

21: LITERARY MAGAZINE: ILLUSTRATION

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will prepare a piece of art to accompany a poem provided on the prompt for a literary magazine. You will have two hours to sketch and draw your final entry, which must be submitted on your own blank 8.5-by-11-inch paper. It may be vertical or horizontal. Contestants must supply their own drawing supplies and may use any medium they choose, including, but not limited to, pencil, pen, charcoal, markers, pastels, etc.

You may use color and/or black and white. Size of art and place in relation to the copy should be considered. You may not use professional materials like art tape, screens, letters or construction paper. Entries that do not follow contest directions will not be eligible for awards.

SUPPLIES NEEDED: Plain 8.5-by-11-inch paper, scratch paper, eraser, correction fluid, any art supplies including, but not limited to, pens, charcoal, markers or pencils. Color and/or black and white is fine.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Adaptation of the art to the copy; originality in interpretation that captures the spirit of the poem prompt. Students will exhibit their control of the medium, design and artistic techniques. The work is a simple, accurate design to illustrate the context of the copy.

22: LITERARY MAGAZINE: PHOTOGRAPHY

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will shoot a photograph to accompany the poem provided on the prompt for a literary magazine. You will have approximately an hour and a half to shoot and submit one image for the contest. The photo can be either vertical or horizontal. Entries will be downloaded for judging in the contest room from your camera’s SD card. If you have a different type of storage media, bring an appropriate card reader etc. No editing of the image will be allowed, so capture a proper exposure and the crop you need when you take the picture. The entry should be a single file, JPEG (no RAW files).

Due to the nature of this contest, students are not required to stay within the convention hotel; however, students still need to adhere to policies and directives from their advisers or chaperones regarding leaving the property.

Contestants must set their camera to the proper local time and date. Images that do not show a timestamp within the time of the contests will not be considered for an award.

Because this contest focuses on the photographic ability of the student, please use standard lenses and filters. Creative filters or specialty lenses are discouraged.

SUPPLIES NEEDED: Camera with SD card or another size card with a card reader/cables to transfer the image to a laptop. Photos MUST be taken with a standard camera, not a cellphone.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Photos that demonstrate original interpretation; photograph is framed in an interesting and visually striking way; photograph demonstrates good use of composition techniques and lighting to effectively communicate the interpretation of the poem; photograph offers effective contrast, depth-of-field and tone; the subject is not cliche. The work is a simple, accurate design to illustrate the context of the copy. Photograph will be judged based on the subject composition and technical quality.


GRAPHIC DESIGN CONTESTS

23: GRAPHIC DESIGN: LOGO (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

Prepare materials before the convention and upload ONE PDF to the NSMC site. The day NSMC registration opens, the contest prompt will be available. Be careful that you do not download the prompt for the prior convention. All contestants must attend the mandatory critique session at the convention or the entry will be disqualified.

This is a general overview of the contest. Read all the instructions/rules on the prompt carefully. Using any available software, design a square logo in both full color and black-and-white (grayscale). Include both logos on the same 8 1/2-by-11-inch page. 

Do not design a full advertisement, just a logo. You may come up with a slogan if you want. A logo traditionally combines art with text.

Only use the information provided on the prompt to create the logo, but you do not need to include all of the information. You may use any styles, fonts and sizes that you deem appropriate.

Only use the images provided for Contest 23 to create the logo. No other images may be used, but you may manipulate or edit the images. Entries that use images or material other than what JEA provides will be disqualified.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Professional typographic details; fonts, art and/or photos in the logo work well together; shows originality, creativity and innovation; work is clean and well executed; follows current design trends.

HELPFUL LINKS

Download contest prompt and materials

Preparing layout entries

24: GRAPHIC DESIGN: INFOGRAPHICS (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

Prepare materials before the convention and upload one PDF to the NSMC site. The day NSMC registration opens, the contest prompt will be available. Be careful that you do not download the prompt for the prior convention. 

All contestants must attend the mandatory critique session at the convention or the entry will be disqualified.

This is a general overview of the contest. Read all the instructions/rules on the prompt carefully.

You will be designing one infographic to accompany a news story for a publication utilizing typography and/or art and graphics. An infographic provides additional information to the reader rather than just being a visual — a diagram, chart or map that conveys information pictorially (i.e. favorite music, survey). 

Using any available software, design one full-color infographic about the topic provided on the prompt. The infographic should fit on one 8 1/2-by-11-inch page. 

If using software specifically designed for infographic creation (like Canva), you are encouraged to use blank templates rather than pulling pre-designed templates. Though it is not specifically banned, judges can easily spot “canned” templates and give greater award consideration to more original designs. During the critique session, contestants may be asked to discuss their process for creating the infographic. 

Use only the information provided for Contest 24 to create the infographic. No other outside facts/statistics may be used. You do not need to use all of the information.

Use only the images provided for Contest 24 to create the infographic. No other images may be used, but you may manipulate or edit the images. Entries that use images or material other than what JEA provides will be disqualified.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Contains proper attribution for information; visually makes a point; uses appropriate format/design; typography fits topic or content; artistic details fit topic or content; design is original and follows current design trends. Includes credit lines to indicate source of information; text follows proper spelling/grammar conventions and follows AP style.

HELPFUL LINKS

Download contest prompt and materials

Preparing layout entries

25: GRAPHIC DESIGN: ADVERTISING (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

Prepare materials before the convention and upload one PDF to the NSMC site. The day NSMC registration opens, the contest prompt will be available. Be careful that you do not download the prompt for the prior convention. 

All contestants MUST attend the mandatory critique session at the convention or the entry will be disqualified.

This is a general overview of the contest. Read all instructions/rules on the prompt carefully.

Using any available software, design a 5-by-7-inch advertisement in black-and-white or color.

Use only the information provided for Contest 25 to create the advertisement. You do not need to use all of the information.

Use only the images provided for Contest 25 to create the infographic. No other images may be used, but you may manipulate or edit the provided images. Entries that use images or material other than what JEA provides will be disqualified.

If you use software made for graphic design creation (like Canva), you are encouraged to use blank templates rather than pre-designed templates. Though it is not specifically banned, judges can easily spot “canned” templates and give greater award consideration to more original designs. During the critique session, contestants may be asked to discuss the process they used for creating their ad.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Typography and artistic details fit topic or content; follows current design trends; creative and imaginative concept; considers what motivates audience. Includes appropriate pitch, business, event or organizational identification; design moves reader’s eye through the ad.

HELPFUL LINKS

Download contest prompt and materials

Preparing layout entries

26: GRAPHIC DESIGN: PHOTO ILLUSTRATION (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

Prepare materials before the convention and upload one PDF to the NSMC site. The day NSMC registration opens, the contest prompt will be available. Be careful that you do not download the prompt for the prior convention. 

All contestants must attend the mandatory critique session at the convention or the entry will be disqualified.

This is a general overview of the contest. Read all instructions/rules on the prompt carefully.

Submit a photograph that has been manipulated through Photoshop or a similar program/app. It needs to be designed to accompany a story package for publication in a high school newspaper or newsmagazine on the subject presented in the article on the prompt.

Design a photo illustration, not an infographic. A photo illustration is a type of digital art that begins with a digital photograph. Using image enhancement software, the artist can then apply a variety of special effects to transform the photo into art.

The photo illustration may be black-and-white and/or color. It must fit in an 8 1/2-by-11-inch space. 

Shoot the photograph(s) yourself and then manipulate it using whatever software you choose. Be sure to only use images you created. No stock photos/copyrighted material may be incorporated into the photo illustration that you submit.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Follows current design trends; visually communicates an idea; shows originality and innovation; shows creativity and artistic details. Clean and well-executed work; sophisticated use of software.

HELPFUL LINKS

Download contest prompt and materials

Preparing layout entries


PHOTOGRAPHY CONTESTS

All photography contests are for individuals only.

GENERAL REQUIREMENTS

  • All images must have been published in the scholastic media during this academic year (in print or online) or planned for publication during this academic year — except those in Themed Photo and Portfolio.
  • No image may have been entered in a previous JEA NSMC — except those in Portfolio.
  • Entrants are responsible for attending a two-hour group critique session. Entrants who do not attend the entire critique will be disqualified.
  • Images submitted into the contest may be cropped from how they appeared or will appear in the publication.
  • Photos may be color (RGB) or black-and-white (grayscale) or a combination of color and black-and-white.
  • Note the number of photos required for each contest entry. If a contest requires three photos and the student does not upload three photos by the deadline, the entry will be disqualified.

TECHNICAL REQUIREMENTS

  • Entrants should visit Preparing Photo Entries for complete and detailed instructions.
  • Photos must be no more than 5000 pixels in the long direction and saved as RGB (or grayscale), JPEG files. (For example: In Adobe Photoshop, adjust the photo's size under Image > Image Size.) The system will reject any images that do not fit these requirements.
  • Captions must be included in the Description field. Photographer's name must be included in the Author field. (For example: In Adobe Photoshop, go to File > File Info.)
  • Photographers should use the Save As … function, not Export. Images exported do not contain the required metadata and will be rejected by the contest system.
  • For contests with multiple photo submissions, entrants should upload images one at a time in the exact order you want the judges to view them. 

DO NOT

  • Do not bring images to the convention or mail them in. All critiques will be completed online.
  • Do not submit images in which the content has been significantly digitally altered. Do not submit images created using artificial intelligence tools. Such images should be entered in Contest 26: Graphic Design – Photo Illustration. Photo illustrations are acceptable as part of a portfolio in Contest 33: Portfolio.

27: THEMED PHOTO (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

Theme for spring 2024: Jazzed Up

NATURE OF THE CONTEST
You will submit one image related to a theme that will be released via social media, email distribution lists and online at jea.org when the NSMC contest registration opens. Photos taken before the theme is released may not be used in this contest, and the metadata embedded in the image will be used should a question arise regarding when an image was taken.

The photograph should be taken by the entrant. A full caption should be included with a brief discussion about how the photo relates to the theme. Photos do not need to have been published in scholastic media nor considered for publication.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR
Imaginative subject matter; technical quality and excellence; photo composition; visual impact; simplicity; cropping; and lighting. Quality of the caption may also be considered.

HELPFUL LINKS
Preparing photo entries

28: SPORTS ACTION PHOTOGRAPHY (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will submit THREE sports action photos.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Imaginative subject matter; technical quality and excellence; photo composition; visual impact; story told in each photograph; simplicity; cropping; and lighting. Judges also will look for a variety of sports-related images, not three similar images. Quality of the caption may also be considered.

HELPFUL LINKS
Preparing photo entries

29: SPORTS FEATURE PHOTOGRAPHY (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will submit THREE images related to sports. The images should not be sports action photos.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Imaginative subject matter; technical quality and excellence; photo composition; visual impact; story told in each photograph; simplicity; cropping; and lighting. Judges will also look for a variety of images, not three similar images. Quality of the caption may also be considered.

HELPFUL LINKS
Preparing photo entries

30: FEATURE PHOTOGRAPHY (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will submit THREE feature images, typically found moments or slices of life — not sports. Pictorial images — images that show graphic and aesthetic qualities of a person or group with strong emphasis on composition — may also be entered here.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Imaginative subject matter, technical quality and excellence; photo composition; visual impact; story told in each photograph; simplicity; cropping; and lighting. Judges also will look for a variety of images, not three similar images. This can include any aspect of student life. Quality of caption may also be considered.

HELPFUL LINKS
Preparing photo entries

31: GENERAL OR SPOT NEWS PHOTOGRAPHY (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will submit ONE news image — not sports. Includes coverage of events for which no planning was possible. Examples include, but are not limited to, accidents, fires and natural disasters. Also includes coverage of planned events when advanced notice was possible. Examples include, but are not limited to, speakers on campus, news conferences, mock exercises and campaigns.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Imaginative subject matter, technical quality and excellence; photo composition; visual impact; story told in photograph; simplicity; cropping; and lighting. Quality of caption may also be considered.

HELPFUL LINKS
Preparing photo entries

32: PHOTO STORY (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will submit THREE, FOUR OR FIVE of your photographs related to a common theme and should visually tell a story. You must upload your photos one at a time in the exact order you want the judges to view them. If the order of the photos is significant in the photo story, students should put a number signifying the order of the photo at the beginning of the caption. For example, "No. 1, …," "No. 2, … ."

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Imaginative subject matter; technical quality and excellence; photo composition; visual impact; story told in each photograph as well as in the package of images; simplicity; cropping; and lighting. Upload each image separately. Quality of caption for each individual image also may be considered.

HELPFUL LINKS
Preparing photo entries

33: PORTFOLIO (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

This is a contest for expert high school photographers. It is designed to help photographers, generally graduating seniors, prepare for scholarship applications, internship applications or job interviews by giving them the opportunity to prepare a portfolio and to have it critiqued by a professional. Students should submit a MINIMUM OF FIVE images and a MAXIMUM OF EIGHT images that reflect their abilities as a photojournalist. Students must upload their photos one at a time in the exact order they want the judges to view them and should include the order number of each image in the Description field with the caption: "Photo 1 — <caption>," for example. A student may enter the portfolio contest only once during his/her high school career. Captions for images in this competition may be a simple title but may also be full journalistic captions.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Strong, clear voice within a variety of assignments; creativity; technical quality; photo composition; visual impact; simplicity; effective cropping; and lighting. Quality of the caption may also be considered as will presentation of the entire portfolio.

HELPFUL LINKS
Preparing photo entries

34: PORTRAIT PHOTO (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

You will submit one portrait photograph, either a formal portrait or an environmental portrait.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Imaginative subject matter; technical quality and excellence; photo composition; visual impact; simplicity; cropping; and lighting. The caption, although required, should include the name of the individual in the photograph with some identifying characteristics such as grade, major, sport or activity as well as some additional information about the person, perhaps a quote from the person. Students should not enter mug shots, sometimes called head shots, but students may enter portraits taken in a studio.

HELPFUL LINKS
Preparing photo entries

35. FIRST-YEAR PHOTO (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

NATURE OF THE CONTEST

Only students in their first year of any journalism, photojournalism or media class (or in their first year on a media staff if the campus does not offer such classes) are eligible for this competition.

Contestant will submit one photograph taken by the entrant of any subject matter. A full caption should be included.

WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

Imaginative subject matter; technical quality and excellence; photo composition; visual impact; simplicity; cropping; and lighting. Quality of the caption may also be considered.

HELPFUL LINKS
Preparing photo entries

Contest categories 36-46

MULTIMEDIA AND BROADCAST CONTESTS

Check each contest to see if it is for an individual or if a team entry is allowed. If team entry is allowed, the contest is listed in the "Team Contests" section of the NSMC registration system, and you may register one or more students for the team.

GENERAL REQUIREMENTS

These requirements apply to all of these contests.

  • The story must have been broadcast from April of this calendar year for the fall convention and during this school year for the spring convention.
  • No video may have been entered in a previous JEA contest.
  • In broadcast contests, students must provide documentation that all audio, video and photographic material submitted belongs to the school submitting the work. This can be done by including evidence of subscription, purchase, license agreement or contract in the YouTube or Vimeo video description of your entry or by emailing it to Broadcast Coordinator A.J. Chambers, MJE. Failure to do so will result in no award and disqualification. (Example: Big Horns Intro by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license https://www.youtube.com/audiolibrary/music)
  • Entrants are responsible for attending a two-hour group critique. Entrants who do not attend the entire critique will be disqualified.

ONLINE SUBMISSION REQUIREMENTS FOR CONTESTS 36-39

  • Refer to video instructions for specific online-submission instructions.
  • If an online submission entry is by a team of two students, each student must be entered in the contest and pay, but only one member of the team must be present at the critique during the convention.

    INSTRUCTIONS FOR ONLINE SUBMISSION OF VIDEOS

    36: BROADCAST NEWS STORY (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

    NATURE OF THE CONTEST

    *Entries will be submitted online before the convention (see Broadcast submission guide).

    Students enter as individuals or in pairs. Total Running Time (TRT) 1:30 to 5:00 minutes. A news story shows a clear reliance on the news values of timeliness, proximity, conflict, impact and prominence. A package is a prerecorded news story containing (usually) a reporter’s voice-over, videotaped shots and sound bites. 

    Reminder: Be sure videos are set to PUBLIC. The story must have been broadcast from April of this calendar year for the fall convention and during this school year for the spring convention. must provide documentation that all audio, video and photographic material submitted belongs to the school submitting the work. This can be done by including evidence of subscription, purchase, license agreement or contract in the YouTube or Vimeo video description of your entry or by emailing it to Broadcast Coordinator A.J. Chambers. Failure to do so will result in no award and disqualification. (Example: Big Horns Intro by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license https://www.youtube.com/audiolibrary/music)

    WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

    Adherence to broadcast style (short sentences, present tense, conversational, clear). Contains all the necessary information and exhibits news judgment. Video sound bites are well-shot close-ups, relevant and interesting. A variety of shots are used and are steady and in focus. Editing is free of glitches and jump cuts, and natural sound is used effectively. Overall, the script and video complement each other, telling the story in an interesting and informative manner. The voice-over is effective and delivered with clarity. Time limit is met + or – 3 seconds.

    INSTRUCTIONS FOR ONLINE SUBMISSION OF VIDEOS

    37: BROADCAST SPORTS STORY (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

    NATURE OF THE CONTEST

    Students enter as individuals or in pairs. Total Running Time (TRT) 1:30 to 4:00 minutes. Broadcast sports stories may be focused on a news event and be timely stories that address serious topics related to athletics. For example, these may include investigative reports about facilities, drug use, injuries, budgets, scholarships, rules and regulations, etc. Or, the story may be a feature that covers sports-related people, art or culture. This may include profiles, reviews or other sports stories related to community events, figures or places. 

    A package is a prerecorded sports story containing a reporter’s voice-over, videotaped shots and sound bites. 

    Reminder: Be sure videos are set to PUBLIC. The story must have been broadcast from April of this calendar year for the fall convention and during this school year for the spring convention. must provide documentation that all audio, video and photographic material submitted belongs to the school submitting the work. This can be done by including evidence of subscription, purchase, license agreement or contract in the YouTube or Vimeo video description of your entry or by emailing it to Broadcast Coordinator A.J. Chambers. Failure to do so will result in no award and disqualification. (Example: Big Horns Intro by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license https://www.youtube.com/audiolibrary/music)

    WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

    Adherence to broadcast style (short sentences, present tense, conversational, clear). Contains all the necessary information and provides a new perspective. Video sound bites are well shot close-ups, relevant and interesting. A variety of shots are used, steady and in focus. Editing is free of glitches and jump cuts, and natural sound is used effectively. Overall, the script and video complement each other, telling the story in an interesting and informative manner. The voice-over is effective and delivered with liveliness and clarity. Time limit is met + or – 3 seconds.

    INSTRUCTIONS FOR ONLINE SUBMISSION OF VIDEOS

    38: BROADCAST FEATURE STORY (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

    NATURE OF THE CONTEST

    Students enter as individuals or in pairs. Total Running Time (TRT) 1:30 to 4:00 minutes. A broadcast feature story is one that covers people, art or culture. This may include profiles, reviews or other stories related to community events, figures or places. A package is a prerecorded story containing a reporter’s voice-over, videotaped shots and sound bites. 

    Reminder: Be sure videos are set to PUBLIC. The story must have been broadcast from April of this calendar year for the fall convention and during this school year for the spring convention. must provide documentation that all audio, video and photographic material submitted belongs to the school submitting the work. This can be done by including evidence of subscription, purchase, license agreement or contract in the YouTube or Vimeo video description of your entry or by emailing it to Broadcast Coordinator A.J. Chambers. Failure to do so will result in no award and disqualification. (Example: Big Horns Intro by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license https://www.youtube.com/audiolibrary/music)

    WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

    Adherence to broadcast style (short sentences, present tense, conversational, clear). Contains all the necessary information and provides a new perspective. Video sound bites are well shot close-ups, relevant and interesting. A variety of shots are used, steady and in focus. Editing is free of glitches and jump cuts, and natural sound is used effectively. Overall, the script and video complement each other, telling the story in an interesting and informative manner. The voice-over is effective and delivered with liveliness and clarity. Time limit is met + or – 3 seconds.

    INSTRUCTIONS FOR ONLINE SUBMISSION OF VIDEOS

    39: BROADCAST COMMERCIAL/PSA (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

    NATURE OF THE CONTEST

    Students enter as individuals or in pairs. Total Running Time (TRT) must be exactly 30 seconds or 1 minute. The piece entered must be produced for school announcements or TV programs. Commercials should publicize school events, activities and social functions. PSAs should attempt to shed light on an issue or situation of importance to teens. 

    Reminder: Be sure videos are set to PUBLIC. The PSA or commercial must have been broadcast from April of this calendar year for the fall convention and during this school year for the spring convention. must provide documentation that all audio, video and photographic material submitted belongs to the school submitting the work. This can be done by including evidence of subscription, purchase, license agreement or contract in the YouTube or Vimeo video description of your entry or by emailing it to Broadcast Coordinator A.J. Chambers. Failure to do so will result in no award and disqualification. (Example: Big Horns Intro by Audionautix is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license https://www.youtube.com/audiolibrary/music)

    WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

    A strong overall impact is critical. Judges will watch for solid videography; editing, audio, graphics/effects and pacing will all be considered. Content material should be accurate and appropriate to the message being delivered. Entries must not exceed either the 30- or 60-second maximum length.

    INSTRUCTIONS FOR ONLINE SUBMISSION OF VIDEOS

    40: VIDEOGRAPHY (ONLINE SUBMISSION)

    Theme for spring 2024: The Heart of My Community

    NATURE OF THE CONTEST

    Individual entries only. Total Running Time (TRT) 1:30-2:00 minutes. When NSMC registration opens,  a theme will be released via social media, email distribution lists and online at jea.org. Contestants must shoot a video essay addressing some aspect of the topic. It is up to each entrant individually to decide the way in which they present the broad topic provided. No interviews may be included. This is a story told by video and natural sounds ONLY. Be sure videos are set to PUBLIC.

    NO MUSIC TRACKS SHOULD BE USED — including recording someone singing as anything more than a short clip of NAT sound. Use of any stock footage or earlier recorded footage is not permitted. 

    WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

    The judges will evaluate overall videography skills displayed including, but not limited to, creative angles, sequences, use of proper technique, ability to utilize natural sound, development of a story line addressing the general topic and the overall impact of the piece. Time limit is met + or – 3 seconds.

    42: VIDEO PACKAGE EDITING

    NATURE OF THE CONTEST

    Individual entries only. Students entering this contest will be evaluated on their ability to edit video and audio in their creation of a news package. JEA will provide a collection of video/audio clips for contestants to choose from. Clips will include interviews and b-roll. You will download all of the clips, choose what elements to use in your final product, edit using your own equipment and submit your work to the judges on the same flash drive that contained the clips.

    The final TRT is to be 1:30. Entries outside +/- 3 seconds of the required time will be disqualified.

    You are not to receive any help from anyone and must work in the contest room. Do not add any additional video or sound. Name keys or lower thirds may be added using your school’s standard graphics.

    SUPPLIES NEEDED: All video editing equipment (laptop with video editing software, extension cord, headphones,
    Note: Be sure your laptop has enough memory to download a number of video clips, edit the material and export the video. Bring an external hard drive if necessary.

    SUBMISSION NOTE: When your entry is complete, you will export it as an .MPEG4, MP4 or .MOV file and name it with your Contestant ID ONLY. Stay in the room until the judge has the entry saved, and you make sure your submission opens and can be viewed by the judges.

    WHAT JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR:
    Attention-grabbing introduction; effective use of interviews; transitions that move the story along; storyline is effectively developed; structure is well thought out; b-roll that supports interviews; effective use of natural sound; editing free of glitches; time limit met.

    43: ONLINE NEWS PACKAGE

    NATURE OF THE CONTEST

    Students enter as individuals or in a team of no more than three students. Students will create a multimedia news package and post it to their own school’s news website. Only students may post material and should have knowledge and appropriate passwords to do so. No tech support will be available in the contest room.

    The comprehensive online news package should include a main story with photo(s) that are captioned and credited, and two or more of these or similar elements: audio, infographics, interactive reader feature, links to related information, pull quotes, sidebar, slideshow, social media coverage, video (b-roll/nat sound), video story package (no more than 3:00 TRT).

    This is an all-day event. See convention program or app and update for the specific time and place for the start of the contest. All contestants must attend a brief, orientation meeting in the morning where they will be given the topic. Then will have about four hours to gather information for the online package and then about three hours to edit, post and submit the assignment.

    This contest may require students to leave the convention hotel to compete. They will be accompanied by JEA contest chaperones, but not directly supervised the entire time.

    Deadlines will be enforced so plan accordingly. Problems with technology will NOT be an excuse for missing the deadline. Do not wait until the last second to post material. The entry must be posted to the school’s website by the deadline, and the Google Form for your entry must be completed. A link to the form will be provided by the lead judge. Only students entered in the contest can produce the video/photo/copy etc. for the entry.

    SUPPLIES NEEDED: All hardware/software needed for producing an online multimedia package  (laptop computer, power cords, cameras, memory cards, memory card readers, video cameras, digital recorders, power strip, microphones, tripods, headphones, editing software, etc.)

    WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

    Includes the required content (See Above)
    Overall Content: Overall package provides comprehensive look at assigned topic; goes beyond the text to enhance reader’s experience; video/audio is used for impact and enhances story content; each element is captioned and credited as needed; package includes multiple layers of coverage beyond just text and photos; use of elements beyond the main story (photos, videos, pull-quotes, polls, etc.) that promote/enhance story content and prevent long blocks of text.
    Broadcast Conventions: Steady camera work; editing free of glitches, jump cuts; interesting, focused and varied shots; sequencing is logical; video/audio is good quality following appropriate broadcast conventions (b-roll, interviews, sound quality, lighting, framing); general broadcast style evident (short sentences, present tense, conversational tone).
    General Conventions: Written material follows AP style; contains few convention errors (spelling/grammar); copy focuses on a clear, interesting, central, specific angle; copy illustrates overall mastery of journalistic writing (accuracy, balance, clarity/conciseness, objectivity and timeliness); copy effectively considers audience interest; answers all important five W’s and H.
    Package Presentation: Content is accessible and easy to navigate; text formatted with no large blank spaces, missing paragraph breaks, strange fonts, odd symbols, etc.; photos display at a proper resolution & proportion, are not oddly cropped and do not show up in the story more than once.

    44: BROADCAST ANCHOR

    NATURE OF THE CONTEST

    Individual entries only. All contestants must attend a brief, orientation meeting in the morning You Entrants will meet in the morning to get their times for receiving the contest prompt, reporting to finalize/practice their script and competing live for the judges.  Each contestant will have the same amount of time to compete.

    You will write and read a script that must include an introduction, three stories and a sign-off. You will be evaluated on your ability to develop that script from the information provided as well as your ability to “report” on a convention-related story based on a topic you are given.

    Your anchor report will include three total stories. You will be given three sets of notes. From those, you will choose two to use in your report. For the third item, you will only get a convention-related topic, and you will have to go and get your own information (facts/quotes) to write a story to include in your script.

    You will receive the contest prompt with the story notes and topic at the time assigned to you in the orientation meeting.

    You will be evaluated on your ability to develop a script from items provided as well as your ability to go into the venue and report on a convention-related story.

    SUPPLIES NEEDED: Note-taking materials (pencil/pen, notebook), timing device. You may use a watch with a second hand, a stopwatch or a mobile phone switched to airplane mode. You may write your final script on paper or on a device such as a laptop or tablet.

     *Note: A countdown clock will be provided in the contest room, but there will NOT be a teleprompter. You may use your own teleprompter app or website on your own device.

    WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

    *This is an anchor contest. Judges always lean toward performance and ability to deliver the news. Professional dress is expected.

    Script: Evidence of good news judgment; relevant 5 W & H information selected; strong angles presented; strong reporting of additional story; catchy, attention-grabbing lead; strong introduction; creative angles featured; details, word choice convey story with clarity; relevant quotes/paraphrased information used and attributed correctly; does not include reporter opinion; stories are balanced and avoid bias; correct broadcast style used (short, present-tense sentences are conversational and written for the ear); strong closing; overall a well-developed script.
    Performance: 1:30 time limit met (+ / - 3 seconds); smooth transitions between stories; maintains eye contact; appropriate voice tone and inflection; professional delivery; strong on-camera presence and poise.

    45: BROADCAST NEWSWRITING

    NATURE OF THE CONTEST

    You will be given five recent articles from national and/or local sources that a news anchor would read without video or as a voice-over while viewers would see the shots of the event in progress. The news story must be based only on the materials provided. Total Running Time (TRT) 1:30. Follow additional directions given on the prompt sheet and by the lead judge.

    You must use a MINIMUM OF THREE stories in your script; you do not need to use all of the provided stories, but you may use all of them if you choose. Prioritize stories according to news value. Begin with an introduction, such as, “I’m AJ Chambers, and this is your morning news update.” Finish with some sort of closing, such as, “That’s a brief look at news. I’m AJ Chambers reporting.”

    SUPPLIES NEEDED: 8 1/2-by-11-inch lined paper, pen, timing device. You may use a watch with a second hand, a stopwatch or a mobile phone switched to airplane mode.

    WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

    News content is accurately conveyed; script exhibits good news judgment; relevant, important information selected; catchy, attention-grabbing lead; strong introduction; creative/strong angles featured for each piece presented; relevant quotes/paraphrased information used and attributed correctly; details and word choice convey each story with clarity; stories include all important 5 W’s and H; does not include reporter opinion; stories are balanced and avoid bias; includes clear, logical transitions between stories; correct broadcast writing style used (short, present-tense sentences are conversational and written for the ear); broadcast includes a strong closing; overall a well-developed script; sequenced appropriately; uses proper grammar; when judges read script, it meets time limit. (1:30 + / - 3 seconds)

    46: BROADCAST PACKAGE

    NATURE OF THE CONTEST

    Students enter in pairs.

    This is an all-day event. See convention program or app for the specific time and place. Total Running Time (TRT) for the entry is 1:30. Students will film and edit using their own equipment. All contestants must attend a brief, orientation meeting in the morning where they will be given the story package topic. Then they will have about four hours to gather information for a story package and then three hours to edit the material and submit the assignment.

    Deadlines will be enforced so plan accordingly. Rendering and copying is part of the process and will not be allowed after time has expired. All editing must be done in the contest room with no outside help from the adviser or other students. An additional room will be available to record voice-over. The contest topic will be given at the orientation. Teams are encouraged to remain in the room until the lead judge successfully uploads their submission.

    This contest may require students to leave the convention hotel to compete. They will be accompanied by JEA contest chaperones, but not directly supervised the entire time.

    SUPPLIES NEEDED: All hardware/software needed for producing a broadcast package (laptop computer with USB port, power cords, video cameras, memory cards, memory card readers, power strip, microphones, tripods, headphones, editing software, etc.)

    SUBMISSION NOTE: Entries will be collected by the judges on a flash drive. When your entry is complete, export it and save as an .MPEG4, MP4 or .MOV file and name it with your Contestant ID ONLY. Teams should remain in the room until the judge has the entry saved, and you make sure your submission opens and can be viewed by the judges.

    WHAT THE JUDGES WILL LOOK FOR

    Demonstrates effective broadcast style: short sentences, present tense, conversational; necessary and interesting information selected; includes facts that support assertions made; includes an effectively developed storyline; script and video combine to tell the story; all segments are on topic; includes strong organization including an attention-grabbing introduction; includes relevant and interesting sound bites; ambiance of event/location captured effectively with b-roll, natural sound; includes interesting and informative voice-over; includes correctly framed and focused close-ups; evidence of good editing, free of glitches and jump cuts; demonstrates effective use of pacing and transitional elements.

    [printfriendly]

    7 Responses

    1. […] Check it out! […]

    2. […] Students in broadcast, photography, layout and graphic design contests should be uploading on their entries on or before Wednesday, Oct. 21. Materials for the layout, graphic design and video package editing contests are available here: http://jea.org/home/awards-honors/write-off-contests/ […]

    3. […] High School Journalism Convention in Orlando Nov. 12 to 15? If so, just a reminder that the JEA Write-off registration deadline is Wednesday, Oct. 21, at 6 p.m. Central Standard […]

    4. […] JEA/NSPA Fall National High School Journalism Fall 2015 Contest Results | Orlando […]

    5. […] The WriteOff competitions drew 2,003 entries in 48 categories. […]

    6. […] JEA/NSPA Fall National High School Journalism Fall 2015 Contest Results | Orlando […]

    7. […] For more information and a full list of JEA national convention write-off contests, click here. […]

    Comments are closed.

    Password Reset
    Please enter your email address and press [Return] or [Enter]. You will receive a new password via e-mail.

    If you don't receive it within a few minutes, please call (785-532-5532) or email us (staff@jea.org), and we'll be happy to assist you.