Profile in Courage High School Awards
Scholarship Sponsored by John F. Kennedy Library Foundation
Eligibility - Open to students in the United States who are enrolled in grades 9–12 at public, private, parochial, or home schools. - U.S. students under age 20 who are enrolled in high school correspondence or GED programs in any of the 50 states, the District of Columbia, or U.S. territories are eligible. - U.S. citizens attending schools overseas may enter. - Previous contest winners and finalists may not enter. - Employees of the contest sponsors and their immediate family members are not eligible. Key dates and formatting rules - Submission deadline: January 12, 2026, by 11:59 PM Eastern Standard Time. - Length: Essays must be at least 700 words and no more than 1,000 words. Citations and the bibliography are not counted toward the word total. - Essays must not contain identifying information about the author. Originality and use of AI - Essays must be the student’s original work. Submissions may be screened for AI-generated content; any essay or bibliography found to include AI assistance will be disqualified. (See Tips for Avoiding Plagiarism.) Topic requirements - Each essay must explain an act of political courage performed by a U.S. elected official who served in or after 1917 (the year John F. Kennedy was born). The act may have occurred at the local, state, or national level. - Because originality is a judging criterion, essays on frequently chosen or obvious subjects will score lower. - The following subjects are not permitted: - John F. Kennedy, Robert F. Kennedy, and Edward M. Kennedy - Any of the senators profiled in the book Profiles in Courage - John Lewis (he received the Profile in Courage Award for Lifetime Achievement; essays about him are disqualified) - Essays about previous Profile in Courage Award recipients will be disqualified unless the essay focuses on a different act of political courage than the one for which the recipient was honored. - Choosing a subject who has been the focus of a past winning essay will reduce the essay’s score. Sources and citation rules - A minimum of five sources is required. Essays that list fewer than five sources will be disqualified. - All sources used must be cited within the essay using parenthetical (in-text) citations. Footnotes are not acceptable. - A bibliography is required; acceptable styles include APA, MLA, or Turabian. Consult the Guidelines for Citations and Bibliographies for details. Nominating teacher requirements - Every entrant must name a nominating teacher on the registration form. - The nominating teacher’s role is to mentor and advise the student during the essay-writing process, review the draft for clarity and correctness (syntax, grammar, spelling, typographical errors), and confirm the submission meets contest rules. - The student’s nominating teacher will be invited, along with the first-place winner, to the annual Profile in Courage Award ceremony at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library in Boston. - Who may serve as a nominating teacher: - Usually a current teacher at the student’s high school (English or History/Social Studies teachers are common choices). Nominating teachers may be current or former teachers, but must currently teach at the same high school as the participant. - For homeschooled students, the parent or legal guardian responsible for instruction may act as the nominating teacher. - Alternatively, a homeschooled student may use a high-school teacher from a previous school as their nominating teacher if that teacher emails confirmation to essaycontest@jfklfoundation.org. Additional notes - Refer to Contest Topic and Information and Helpful Tips for Writing Your Essay for further guidance on selecting and developing your subject. - See Tips for Avoiding Plagiarism for information about acceptable use of sources and AI detection.
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