Young Economist of the Year 2020 competition - RES.
Submission Guidelines. T hank you for your interest in the JASNA Essay Contest. Our judges value original insights and clear, correct writing. Essays should be directed to a well-informed general audience, not a strictly academic one, and should be based primarily on the student's own observations, with adequate support from the Jane Austen work under discussion. You may assume that the reader.
This year’s Young Geographer of the Year competition is now open for entries. The competition, run in partnership with Geographical magazine, gives students the opportunity to explore the geography of the Arctic. Through research needed to produce their competition entries, pupils will discover what makes this polar environment unique and how changes in the Arctic can have global impacts.
In 2020 the Essay Contest will connect Jane Austen’s novels to her Juvenilia. The latter are short pieces she wrote as a young teenager—brief stories, plays, and chapters of novels. Many of the works are laugh-out-loud funny and feature memorably naughty young ladies who have inspired this year’s essay topic: female “villains” in Austen’s novels.
As part of the initiative we are holding an essay contest. It is open to people between 16 and 25 years old. Essays should be no longer than 1,000 words. The deadline for submissions is July 31st.
Instructions for entrants and essay questions are provided for the Kelvin, Thomas Campion and Vellacott prizes on the lefthand side as attachments. There is also an FAQ page for entrants and their teachers, as well as a guide for teachers on how to use our online system to run an internal competition within school and how to approve or modify essays.
The subject area for the 2019 essay competition is the 'The Phenomenological Tradition'. We welcome essays on any topic within this area. Entries will be assessed with regard to excellence, originality, and interest. No topic, school, or style of philosophy is excluded.
Sons of the American Revolution Essay Contest Now called the Knight Essay Contest, this annual competition asks students to examine any aspect of the Revolutionary War, the Declaration of Independence, or the US Constitution, in a 500- to 750-word essay. Open to 11th- and 12th-grade students only. Many states have local competitions, leading to state and national competition - large.