Shmoop Spring 2010 Inaugural Essay Contest

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Hey, there! Looking for the latest Shmoop Essay Contest?

Look here: http://www.shmoop.com/essay-contest/

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Spring 2010 Essay Contest

Results: http://www.shmoop.com/news/2010/06/21/essay-contest-winners/

– original post below –

In celebration of National Poetry Month, Shmoop announces our first essay contest for high school students.

Answer this question in 500 or fewer words:

In Robert Frost’s “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” …

Examine the relationship between the speaker in the poem and his environment, which includes not only the woods themselves but his horse, the owner of the woods, and the community. Include in your discussion an examination of Frost’s use of language and imagery, focusing on how these contribute to the meaning of the poem and help him to achieve his purpose. Be sure to support your ideas with evidence from the poem.

1 Grand Prize Winner Wins an iPad

3 Runners-Up Get a Shmoop T-Shirt

  • Yeah, it’s no iPad. But you’ll look great. Trust us.

Finalists to be Judged by Jim Burke

  • Jim Burke is a Special Advisor to Shmoop and an all-around awesome English teacher.
  • Mr. Burke teaches AP English Literature and 9th grade College Prep English at Burlingame High School in Burlingame, CA.
  • Mr. Burke is the founder of the English Companion Ning, an online community of 15,000 English teachers.
  • Mr. Burke has published 20 books for English teachers.
  • Check out Jim Burke’s personal website.

Contest Rules

  • Contest open to currently enrolled High School (or Senior High) students (and younger)
  • 500 words maximum
  • Open to students from around the world (as allowed by local law)
  • Entries must be written in English
  • Deadline for entry is May 28, 2010 at 11:59pm Pacific Daylight Time
  • One entry per student and only one student per entry
  • To submit your entry, email your essay as a Word, Text, or PDF document to support@shmoop.com
    • No other media types will be accepted
    • You must include:
      • Your first and last name
      • Age
      • Your current grade level
      • Name of your English teacher
      • Full name of your high school, plus its main phone number and address
  • By submitting your work to Shmoop, you give Shmoop permission to republish your essay, along with your name, school, city, and state.

The Fine Print

  • No purchase necessary to enter.
  • Contest void where prohibited by law.
  • 1 student per entry (no group submissions allowed). Student must be currently enrolled in High School, Sr. High School, or equivalent (homeschooled students are welcome). If younger students (e.g. Middle School) want to give it a shot, we welcome your submissions, too.
  • Prizes may not be exchanged for cash or other goods and are non-transferable.
  • Finalists and winner will be selected by the sole discretion of Shmoop’s judging panel. Sorry, we cannot provide individual feedback on entries.
  • Can’t Buy Me Love: Shmoop judges do not respond to any attempts to win favor (even if we have major weaknesses for chocolate, cupcakes, and roasted almonds).
  • We’ll make you Interwebs famous: By submitting an entry, you grant Shmoop University, Inc. an irrevocable, worldwide license to publish your work, in part or in its entirety, along with your name, school name, city, and state.
  • Shmoop is all about inspiring original thought… let’s keep this contest clean: By submitting an entry, you confirm that this work is entirely your original work and that you have not received any help from others. If you have relied on any other person or publication’s thoughts to write your essay, you must cite your sources in MLA format. You acknowledge that Shmoop may use an anti-plagiarism service to verify that your essay is original and may inform your school administration if you have submitted plagiarized materials.

79 Responses to “Shmoop Spring 2010 Inaugural Essay Contest”

  1. [...] celebration of National Poetry Month, Shmoop announces its first Poetry Essay Contest.  High school students are asked to submit an essay about “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy [...]

  2. Rhonda Key says:

    We plan to enter!

  3. Nancy Ngo says:

    I’m excited. :D -buys you chocolate- Anything?

  4. Kanika Basu says:

    Hey does this work for high school students all over the world?????

  5. Fatina says:

    Hi,
    Do you accept international participants?

    Thanks,
    Fatina

  6. Ruth says:

    Are you able to enter this from Scotland?

  7. Shmoop says:

    Yes, we accept entries from outside the U.S. – so long as it is alllowed by your local law.

  8. MJB says:

    May teachers help with editing/revising and proofreading?

  9. Shmoop says:

    MJB, that is a great question. While we believe that revision and feedback are critical parts of teaching writing, our rules for this contest state that students may not receive any outside help. In order to keep the playing field level, entries need to be the sole work of the student.

  10. Sherria says:

    this is cool.!!!!!!!!!!! i am going to WIN!

  11. Christian says:

    What if one is only 13 years old and in high school? Am I still eligible for the contest?

  12. Anthony Vaughan says:

    What format does the essay have to be written in? MLA? If MLA, must it include the four line heading? Single or double spacing? Thanks.

  13. Jola says:

    Do you allow home educated and/or Post Secondary Education Option students to enter?

  14. [...] to enter because, boy, would I love me an iPad). Entries are accepted until May 28th. Here is a link for the prompt and further [...]

  15. [...] Schmoop Literary Analysis Contest: Write about Robert Frost; win an iPod. I want to enter this contest myself!! [...]

  16. Shmoop says:

    Christian – yes, high school or middle school students are welcome to enter.

    Anthony – we’re more interested in your great thinking than formatting. Single spaced or double-spaced is fine. Or, heck, 1.5 spaced, for that matter. No headers necessary, although a title is probably a good idea. If you need to cite sources for your essay, please use MLA citation format.

  17. JAK says:

    including all of the name, school, english teacher stuff, does it still have to be 500 words or less? OR does that apply only to the actual essay itself?

  18. Kristopher Donnelly says:

    I’m really looking forward to trying to win this, it will be nice to test myself, especially against people from all around the world. Good luck everybody.

  19. Tyesha says:

    There is usually a hidden word in the essay that many of the ap groups dare us to use. Last year was (this is sparta!), what’s this year’s?

  20. megan says:

    does it HAVE to be 500 words? and dos it have to be a specific font?

  21. Lamion says:

    Can I talk to my family about ideas i have?

  22. Rebecca Sutton says:

    I love the ipad its so cool

  23. Bobby says:

    Will there be anymore contests like this?? Cuz i hate ipads they don’t work!

  24. Nahom says:

    This is the best thing ever

  25. Lizbeth says:

    Is there any application or do i just email it to you

  26. Shell Smith says:

    Love apple products, but my husband NEEDS an iPad so badly!!!!!

  27. ACE says:

    SO let me get this straight… this is a poetry contest right? Or is it essay?
    Also , what is the judging based on?
    Also, is there any specific topic?
    Thank you.

  28. Shmoop says:

    @ACE: it’s all in the rules above. :-) this is an essay contest for high school students and the question is based on Robert Frost’s “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening.”

  29. Vincent Sather says:

    i think this is a very good idea…i want to try to do this because i have never done a contest like this before…also the ipad would nice to have…”Shmoop, do yall count words like “a” or “or” because some teachers, or in this case judges don’t count those words. and do we have to do in-line citations for works or words that we cite?” let me know please because im very interested in this! thanks!!

  30. Shmoop says:

    @ Vincent – every word counts. :-)

    We require MLA citation… you can see our “citing Shmoop” page: http://www.shmoop.com/help/cite-shmoop/#mla

  31. Michelle says:

    I researched some interpretations of the poem but I used a multitude of ideas(including shmoop) in my own mash-up interpretation. No pladgerism though. Sill cite? And my essay is 500 words on the dot–will the citing be a problem if it puts me over the word limit?

  32. Shmoop says:

    Hi Michelle – yes, you should always cite sources that influenced your ideas (just as you would for an essay that you turn in to your teacher). Please trim your essay down to 500 words including the in-line citations.

    Revision is probably the most important step of the writing process. The delete key can often be your best friend. :-)

  33. [...]  http://www.shmoop.com/news/2010/04/12/poetry-essay-contest-ipad/ [...]

  34. I have a big issue on my hands, how will you know if the person will or will not cheat??? I think that contests like these should have it to where you will be recorded for every where you go and I meant to where we would send a recording of everything we type and there should be a limit of how long it would be. It’s gonna be very hard to win since my school, they sent an E-mail to all our teachers and that is how I got here. This is like the one of the worst ideas but I’m gonna try to actually do this and hopefully I win :) . . . I’ll see you guys later then???

  35. Anonymous says:

    At what time will the essays be reviewed and the winners be notified?

  36. vienna says:

    when will the winners be announced?

  37. Shmoop says:

    The deadline for entries is May 28, 2010 at 11:59pm Pacific Daylight Time and we’ll announce the finalists and winner in early June. Good luck!

  38. Elizabeth Ngo says:

    are we aloud to resubmit our esays if we have made a small mistake

  39. Aditi says:

    What if a Post-Grad student [ English Literature] wants to enter the contest ?

  40. [...] has announced an essay contest, in celebration of National Poetry Month, for an Apple iPad! Essays must be a discussion in [...]

  41. Sarah says:

    Are we allowed to use helpful sources in our paper? And if we do use them, do you cite them using paranthetical citations?

  42. Britta says:

    hi. this sounds like a fun contest to enter . although i am only in 7th grade so this is a little to difficult for me. may i have family help? or is there going to be more contests like this every year so i may do it when i get a little bit more knowledge about the subject.

  43. Elizabeth Ngo says:

    if i already submitted my essay and i wanted to resubmit it because i made a mistake. is that possible

  44. adonica says:

    can graders participate too?

  45. Shmoop says:

    @ Elizabeth – yes, please resubmit and make a note in your email that you are resubmitting so we don’t read both submissions.

    @ Aditi – sorry, this contest is only open to high school (secondary) students and younger

    @ Sarah – yes, if you use any outside resources, you must use MLA citation

    @ Adonica – not sure what you mean by “graders.” The contest is open to high school (secondary) students and younger.

  46. adonica says:

    ummm, what I meant is even if I am not High School student I can join? . . . because I am only Grade 5 . :(

  47. adonica says:

    if you will right an essay the topic is all about the “Stopping by Woods on a Snowy Evening” ? , and none other else ?, only that topic ? . . .

  48. Shmoop says:

    Yes, the contest is open to younger students. Way to be ambitious!

    The only question for this contest is in the rules above. We only have 1 topic (or question) because it creates a fair playing field for everyone who enters. We won’t accept entries that do not answer the question in our rules.

    Good luck!

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