Walter S. and Syrena M. Howell Essay Contest
Students wishing to apply for this scholarship and prize must write an essay. The student who writes the best essay in 1,500-2,500 words will be awarded a scholarship of at least $3,000 and a $1,000 prize. Judges may select additional worthy essays for recognition and scholarships.
The goal of the Howell Essay Scholarship is to encourage students to analyze the current use in social, academic and political discourse of propaganda, as defined as unproved and/or unverifiable assumptions in a report or statement of allegations reflecting the view and interests of its advocates.
This contest and scholarship were established by Grant Howell, former editor of The Daily (Royal Oak) Tribune, in memory of his parents, Walter and Syrena Howell.
This scholarship and award is given annually to a ComArtSci undergraduate student who writes the best essay examining media bias, a subject of deep concern to Howell. He was a feisty newsman, in the best sense of the word, always wanting his staff and his newspaper to cover the news fairly, objectively and honestly.
2025 Essay Topic
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution forbids the government from restricting the press. Yet in 2024, the U.S. began investigating RT (Russia Today) for disseminating “Russian propaganda” in the U.S. Following that, Meta, YouTube and other sites blocked RT. This is just one example of recent efforts to stop the spread of propaganda and unverifiable information as if they were statements of truth or accuracy. Can the United States have a free press and stop propaganda? Explain how.
In your essay, which may include text, audio or video, use and cite at least three sources. In keeping with the spirit of this assignment, entries will be checked to ensure nothing has been generated by artificial intelligence (AI) and that there is no plagiarism. Potential violations will be examined under the School of Journalism’s academic integrity policy.
Essay Guidelines
Your essay should be 1,500–2,500 words and must be focused on this year’s topic. Consideration will be given to analyses with critical thinking and research, including — but not limited to — web searches, interviews with experts on the subject and links to examples. Sources must be properly cited. Essay may be presented in a written or multimedia form. Multimedia essays should include scripts for any video content. Students may also produce multimedia elements as a supplement to a written essay.
Text essays and/or scripts should be in a Word document (.doc or .docx). Do NOT include your name or any other identifying information in your essay files.
Eligibility Requirements
To be eligible, entrant must be currently enrolled as an undergraduate with a major in the College of Communication Arts and Sciences and graduating in December 2024 or later. Scholarships are issued for the upcoming fall semester.
Questions
Questions can be directed to Joe Grimm at jgrimm@msu.edu.
School of Journalism scholarships are applied to a student’s university account to support a future semester of study. To be considered, applicants must complete the application form for this scholarship opportunity.
- Award
- $4,000
- Deadline
- 01/17/2025
- Supplemental Questions
- Upload your essay and/or script here (1,500-2,500 words). Do NOT include your name or other identifying information in your essay file. Please submit your essay as a Word file (.doc or .docx). 2024 Howell Essay Topic: A 2023 report by Freedom House, a human rights advocacy group, warns of the use of artificial intelligence to generate propaganda. According to the report, the number of governments using AI to steer online discussions in their favor doubled in the previous year to 47. The report said, “AI-based tools that can generate text, audio and images have quickly grown more sophisticated, accessible and easy to use.” This is increasing worries about the growth of deliberate disinformation campaigns. In your Howell essay, describe the disinformation that has been created and, more importantly, describe roles for the news media’s role in exposing, discouraging and preventing government creation of AI propaganda. In your essay, which may be text, audio or video, use and cite three sources. In keeping with the spirit of this assignment, entries will be checked to ensure nothing has been generated by AI and that there is no plagiarism. Potential violations will be examined under the School of Journalism’s academic integrity policy.
- Howell Essay Multimedia Elements: If you have multimedia elements to include with your essay, enter a URL to a central location where the material can be accessed, such as a portfolio website, YouTube channel and/or shared document/folder (Google Drive, Microsoft OneDrive, etc.). Multimedia elements are not required.
- Use of Anti-Plagiarism Software to Review Howell Essay Entries: Consistent with MSU’s efforts to enhance student learning, foster honesty, and maintain integrity in our academic processes, essay reviewers may use a tool called Turnitin to compare an essay submission with multiple sources. The tool compares each submitted essay with an extensive database of prior publications and papers, providing links to possible matches and a “similarity score.” The tool does not determine whether plagiarism has occurred or not. Instead, reviewers must make a complete assessment and judge the originality of the submitted work. All submissions to this contest may be checked using this tool. Submissions will not be retained in the repository hosted by Turnitin beyond the initial comparison.
- Howell Essay Statement of Originality: Please read and indicate
- Month and year you expect to graduate from MSU
- If you are not a primary major in the College of Communication Arts & Sciences, please list your additional major or second major in the College.
- Do you have a declared minor in the College of Communication Arts and Sciences? If so, please list.
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