Student Journalism and America's 250th
Celebrating Student Journalism, Reflecting on America's Past
In honor of the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence, the American Academy of Arts and Science has launched a national showcase for student journalism.
The Academy seeks to support the important role that student journalism plays in a healthy constitutional democracy by recognizing outstanding community-based journalism projects that explore our nation’s story and its founding ideals. We invite student journalists to submit reporting projects that engage local communities in discussing America’s story and its founding ideals.
Exemplary projects will appear on a showcase website. A smaller selection of reporters and editors will be honored at a dinner and will discuss civic journalism with a panel of outstanding journalists, historians, and civic engagement experts, including Deborah Fallows, James Fallows, Kimberly Atkins Stohr, and Ted Johnson.
The Academy was founded in 1780 during the American Revolution by John Adams, John Hancock, and 60 other scholar-patriots who understood that gathering knowledge and advancing learning in service of the public good would be key to building a new and durable nation.
DEADLINE: Send your submissions to ourcommonpurpose@amacad.org by May 15, 2026.
Criteria
The Academy will select stories that:
Follow basic journalism principles, including accuracy, openness, diversity of sources, clarity, and lively storytelling.
Focus on community efforts to find common ground.
Reveal a mix of conflict and collaboration over key civic principles, personalities, or purposes.
Reveal and evoke a corner of American identity that might not otherwise be well known.
Grapple with some of the key ideas in the Declaration of Independence, as outlined in the resources below.