Deadline

July 15, 2025

The Carl Towley Award is JEA’s highest honor and is presented to a JEA member whose work is unusually beneficial and of superior value to the national JEA and to scholastic journalism. JEA membership is required. Since 1985, only one award is presented each year.

The winner receives a lifetime membership to JEA, is asked to speak at the adviser awards luncheon at the Fall JEA/NSPA National High School Journalism Convention and has his or her travel and hotel paid for the fall convention. JEA members are encouraged to nominate individuals for this award. Nominations of unsuccessful candidates are retained for a maximum of two additional years and the original nominator is invited to send updated information by the July 15 deadline.

The Carl Towley Award, JEA’s highest tribute to a member, is given in honor of its first executive secretary. The National Association of Journalism Directors, as JEA was originally known, grew under his leadership.

Carl Towley (1907-1959) wrote letters to administrators of high schools and colleges throughout the nation, calling attention to the importance of journalism courses. His action was triggered by the facts that many journalism teachers were not adequately prepared to teach journalism or advise student publications and also that among 556 winners in the 1956 National Merit Scholarship competition, only three students planned to major in journalism.

“Although officers of NAJD came and went, Carl remained the unifying influence that kept the association functioning,” wrote Sister M. Rita Jeanne, FSPA, in JEA’s Golden Anniversary record. “Dedicated, not only to teaching journalism, but also to the betterment of teaching techniques and conditions, Carl was a bulwark of strength in the fight for professional recognition of journalism teachers.”

Towley established commissions, planned programs, strengthened cooperative efforts with other scholastic journalism organizations and created projects to help journalism students and their advisers develop journalistic skills. He chaired a Commission on the Status of Journalism and planned a series of articles in educational journals slanted to interest administrators.

“Blueprint for Tomorrow” was the theme for the Hopkins (Minnesota) High School yearbook, The Warrior, in 1959 when the staff made a surprise dedication to their adviser, Carl Towley.

Entry Criteria

Nominate an individual for the Carl Towley Award. Include with the nomination form your letter of recommendation explaining your relationship with the nominee. Describe the candidate’s effort to support JEA on a national, regional, state and/or local level, when applicable. Include nominee’s involvement in local, state, regional or national scholastic journalism organizations and work done to improve scholastic journalism.

Judging Criteria

  • To one who teaches the fundamentals of civic responsibility
  • To one who practices these fundamentals through service to the community
  • To one who perfects these fundamentals by living them each day
  • To one who believes, “The greatest contributions I can make to my classes is to help them develop a social consciousness — which to me is a sensitive awareness of others, their needs, hopes, fears and accomplishments — all of which may lead to mutual understanding and respect.”

We take pride in dedicating the 1959 Warrior to you — Carl Towley.

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