What’s bothering you? Who could do something about it? What could you say to them that would persuade them to care, or to make change?
And … what if we all read your letter? How could you make us care too?
These are some of the questions we’re asking you to ponder for our new Open Letter Contest. An open letter is a published letter of protest or appeal usually addressed to an individual, group or institution but intended for the general public. Think of the many “Dear Taylor Swift” open letters you can find online and on social media: Sure, they’re addressed to Ms. Swift, but they’re really a way for the writer to share opinions and feelings on feminism, or ticket sales, or the music industry, or … the list goes on.
As you might already know if you’ve read Martin Luther King’s famous Letter From Birmingham Jail, an open letter is a literary device. Though it seems on the surface to be intended for just one individual or group, and therefore usually reads like a personal letter (and can make readers feel they are somehow “listening in” on private thoughts), it is really a persuasive essay addressed to the public. This recent letter signed by over 1,000 tech leaders about the dangers of A.I., this funny 2020 letter addressed to Harry and Meghan, and this video letter from young Asian-Americans to their families about Black Lives Matter are all examples of the tradition.
Now we’re inviting you to try it yourself. Write your own open letter, to anyone you like on any issue you care about, as long as it is also appropriate and meaningful for a general Times audience.
Whom should you write to? What should you say? How do open letters work?
The rules and FAQ below, along with our forthcoming how-to guide and Student Opinion forum, can walk you through ways to get started.
Because this is a new contest, we expect questions. Please ask any you have in the comments and we’ll answer you there, or write to us at LNFeedback@nytimes.com.
The Challenge
Write an open letter to a specific audience that calls attention to an issue or problem and prompts reflection or action on it.
Whether you choose to write to your parents, teachers, school board members or mayor; a member of Congress; the head of a corporation; an artist or entertainer; or a metonym like “Silicon Valley” or “The Kremlin,” ask yourself, What do I care about? Who can make changes, big or small, local or global, to address my issue or problem? What specifically do I want my audience to understand or do? And how can I write this as an “open letter,” compelling not just to me and the recipient, but to the general audience who will be reading my words?
The Times has published numerous open letters over the years, to both famous and ordinary people. You can find a long list of free examples in our forthcoming guide.
This contest invites students to express themselves and imagine that their words can lead to real change.
Your open letter MUST:
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Focus on an issue you care about and with which you have some experience. You can write about almost anything you like, whether it’s a serious issue like bullying, or something more lighthearted like why bugs deserve respect, but we have found over the years that the most interesting student writing grows out of personal experience. Our related Student Opinion forum and how-to guide can help you come up with ideas.
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Address a specific audience relevant to the issue. Choose an individual, group, organization or institution who is in a position to make change or promote understanding about your topic.
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Call for action, whether the change you seek is something tangible, like asking Congress to enact a law or demanding a company stop a harmful practice, or something more abstract, like inviting your audience to understand or reflect on something they may have never considered.
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Be suitable and compelling for a wide general audience. An open letter simultaneously addresses an explicit recipient — Joe Biden, Vladimir Putin or your gym teacher — as well as us, the general public, your implicit audience. Though your letter might seem to be meant just for one person, it is really trying to persuade a general reader. Make sure you write it in such a way that it is relevant, understandable, appropriate and meaningful for any New York Times reader. (Again, our related guide can help.)
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Be written as a letter, in a voice and tone that is appropriate for both your audience and purpose. Are you simply taking an argumentative essay you’ve written for school already and slapping a “Dear X” on top of it and a “Sincerely, Y” on the bottom? No.
A letter — even an open letter — is different from a formal essay, and your writing should reflect that. Can you be informal? Even funny? If that makes sense for your purpose and audience, then yes, please. Our related guide, and the many examples we link to, can help you think about this, but we hope the format of a letter will let you loosen up a bit and express yourself in your natural voice. (For example, you’ll be writing as “I” and addressing your letter’s recipient as “you.”)
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Also attempt to persuade a general audience. Though it is written in the form of a letter, it is an opinion piece, and you are trying to make a case and support it with evidence, as you would any argument. Remember that you are trying to change hearts and minds, so you’ll be drawing on the same rhetorical strategies as you might have for our editorial contest. (Again, more on this in the forthcoming guide.)
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Make your case in 460 words or fewer. Your title and sources are not part of the word count.
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Inform with evidence from at least two sources, including one from The Times and one from outside The Times. We hope this contest encourages you to deepen your understanding of your topic by using multiple sources, ideally ones that offer a range of perspectives. Just make sure those sources are trustworthy.
Because this is a letter, not a formal essay, we are not asking you to provide in-text citations, but we will be asking you to list the sources you used — as many as you like — in a separate field that does not contribute to your word count. Keep in mind, however, that if you include evidence from those sources, our readers (and judges) should always be able to tell where it came from. Be careful to put quotations around any direct quotes you use, and cite the source of anything you paraphrase.
A Few Rules
In addition to the guidelines above, here are a few more details:
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You must be a student ages 13 to 19 in middle school or high school to participate, and all students must have parent or guardian permission to enter. Please see the F.A.Q. section for additional eligibility details.
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Your open letter should be original for this contest. That means it should not already have been published at the time of submission, whether in a school newspaper, for another contest or anywhere else.
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Keep in mind that the work you send in should be appropriate for a Times audience — that is, something that could be published in a family newspaper (so, please, no curse words).
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You may work alone or in groups, but students should submit only one entry each.
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You must also submit a short, informal “artist’s statement” as part of your submission, that describes your writing and research process. These statements, which will not be used to choose finalists, help us to design and refine our contests. See the F.A.Q. to learn more.
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All entries must be submitted by May 1, at 11:59 p.m. Pacific time using the electronic form at the bottom of this page.
Resources for Students and Teachers
Use these resources to help you write your open letter:
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Our forthcoming step-by-step guide.
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A long list of free examples of open letters published in The New York Times, which you will be able to find in our step-by-step guide.
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A writing prompt: To Whom Would You Write an Open Letter? This prompt offers students a “rehearsal space” for thinking about to whom they’d like to write an open letter, the reason they’re writing and why they think that issue is important not only for the recipient but also for a wider audience.
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Argumentative writing prompts: We publish new argumentative writing prompts for students each week in our Student Opinion and Picture Prompt columns. You can find them all, as they publish, here, or many of them, organized by topic, in our forthcoming collection of over 300 prompts.
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Argumentative writing unit: This unit includes writing prompts, lesson plans, webinars and mentor texts. While it was originally written to support our Student Editorial Contest, many of the resources can help students form compelling arguments, cite reliable evidence and write engagingly for an open letter, as well.
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Our contest rubric: This is the rubric judges will use to judge this contest.
Frequently Asked Questions
Below are answers to your questions about writing, judging, the rules and teaching with this contest. Please read these thoroughly and, if you still can’t find what you’re looking for, post your query in the comments or write to us at LNFeedback@nytimes.com.
Questions About Writing
How is this contest different from your long-running Editorial Contest? Can we still use those materials?
For a decade we ran an editorial contest, and the students who participated wrote passionately about all kinds of things — A.I., fast fashion, race, trans rights, college admissions, parental incarceration, fan fiction, snow days, memes, being messy and so much more. You can still write about the issues and ideas that fire you up — it’s just that this time around you’ll be doing it as a letter to a person who has the power to make change on or bring understanding to that issue.
Our related guide has more about the differences between a traditional opinion essay and an open letter, but the many materials we developed for that earlier contest are also woven into the guide, since concepts like ethos, logos and pathos are still very much relevant to this challenge.
I have no idea what to write about. Where should I start?
Our Student Opinion forum can help via its many questions that encourage you to brainstorm both the audience you might write to and the topics you’d like to address.
Can I actually send my open letter?
You can! Just wait until after you have submitted your work to us to do so since we have a rule that nothing can be published prior to submission. (As always for our contests, you retain the copyright to the piece you submit, and can do whatever you like with it.)
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Questions About Judging
How will my open letter be judged?
Your work will be read by New York Times journalists, as well as by Learning Network staff members and educators from around the United States. We will use this rubric to judge entries.
What’s the “prize”?
Having your work published on The Learning Network and being eligible to have your work published in the print New York Times.
When will the winners be announced?
About 8-10 weeks after the contest has closed.
My piece wasn’t selected as a winner. Can you tell me why?
We typically receive thousands of entries for our contests, so unfortunately, our team does not have the capacity to provide individual feedback on each student’s work.
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QUESTIONS ABOUT THE RULES
Who is eligible to participate in this contest?
This contest is open to students ages 13 to 19 who are in middle school or high school around the world. College students cannot submit an entry. However, high school students (including high school postgraduate students) who are taking one or more college classes can participate. Students attending their first year of a two-year CEGEP in Quebec Province can also participate. In addition, students age 19 or under who have completed high school but are taking a gap year or are otherwise not enrolled in college can participate.
The children and stepchildren of New York Times employees are not eligible to enter this contest. Nor are students who live in the same household as those employees.
Can I have someone else check my work?
We understand that students will often revise their work based on feedback from teachers and peers. That is allowed for this contest. However, be sure that the final submission reflects the ideas, voice and writing ability of the student, not someone else.
Do I need a Works Cited page?
Yes. We provide you with a separate field to list the sources you used to inform or write your open letter. You’re allowed to format your list however you want; we will not judge your entry based on formatting in this section. Internal citations in your letter are not necessary.
Why are you asking for an Artist’s Statement about our process? What will you do with it?
All of us who work on The Learning Network are former teachers. One of the many things we miss, now that we work in a newsroom rather than a classroom, is being able to see how students are reacting to our “assignments” in real time — and to offer help, or tweaks, to make those assignments better. We’re asking you to reflect on what you did and why, and what was hard or easy about it, in large part so that we can improve our contests and the curriculum we create to support them. This is especially important for new contests, like this one.
Another reason? We have heard from many teachers that writing these statements is immensely helpful to students. Stepping back from a piece and trying to put into words what you wanted to express, and why and how you made artistic choices to do that, can help you see your piece anew and figure out how to make it stronger. For our staff, they offer important context that help us understand individual students and submissions, and learn more about the conditions under which students around the world create.
Whom can I contact if I have questions about this contest or am having issues submitting my entry?
Leave a comment on this post or write to us at LNFeedback@nytimes.com.
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QUESTIONS ABOUT TEACHING WITH THIS CONTEST
Do my students need a New York Times subscription to access these resources?
No. All of the resources on The Learning Network are free.
If your students don’t have a subscription to The New York Times, they can also get access to Times pieces through The Learning Network. All the activities for students on our site, including mentor texts and writing prompts, plus the Times articles they link to, are free. Students can search for articles using the search tool on our home page.
How do my students prove to me that they entered this contest?
After they press “Submit” on the form below, they will see a “Thank you for your submission.” line appear. They can take a screenshot of this message. Please note: Our system does not currently send confirmation emails.
Submission Form
We will post the submission form here on the day the contest opens.