Schools
Applications Open For New Hampshire’s Largest Student Journalism Award
The deadline for $5K prize, open to all high school students attending public, charter, or parochial schools, has been extended to April 30.

The Brodsky Prize was established seven years ago by the late Jeffrey Brodsky and his father, Howard, to encourage student journalists to innovate.
The $5,000 Prize is open to all high school students attending public, charter, or parochial schools in New Hampshire.
Judging criteria include a student's journalistic initiative and enterprise and what Jeffrey Brodsky called “a contrarian nature and out-of-the-box thinking.”
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The application deadline has been extended to Tuesday, April 30, at midnight.
Jeffrey Brodsky said of student journalism, “Working on the school newspaper was the most formative and meaningful high school experience for me — more than any classroom. It's more important than ever for young journalists to push boundaries and to challenge authority, and they can start by using the power of their school paper just like the press in the professional world.”
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The Nackey Scripps Loeb School of Communications helps oversee the award program and provides one of the judges, Executive Director Laura Simoes. Longtime judges are Howard Brodsky, Jeffrey's father and co-founder and chairman of CCA Global Partners; Misbah Tahir, former Little Green co-editor, now a biotechnology finance executive; former NH Union Leader and Sunday News president and publisher Joseph McQuaid, and Leah Todd Lin, VP of Audience Strategy for NH Public Radio.
More info on The Brodsky Prize, including past winners and applications, is available at thebrodskyprize.org.
Submitted by the Nackey Scripps Loeb School of Communications.
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