Table of Contents
ݮƵAPP’s 2020–2021 Free Speech Essay Contest winners
FIRE’s High School Outreach team is delighted to announce the following winners of our 2020–2021 Free Speech Essay Contest — and to publish the first place essay.
This year’s prompt asked students to draw on current events, historical examples, personal experiences, or other ݮƵAPP resources to pen “a persuasive letter or essay [to] convince your peers that free speech is a better idea than censorship.” Our top submission imagined a letter from early 20th century rabbi Stephen S. Wise to President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Without further ado… the winners are:
First Place - $10,000 Scholarship
- Maxwell Kearney - Westlake High School
Thousand Oaks, Calif.
(Scroll or click to read his essay in full.)
Second Place - $5,000 Scholarship
- Sami Al-Asady - Ironwood High School
Glendale, Ariz.
Third Place - (3) $1,000 Scholarships
- Salome Augusto - Stone Bridge High School
Ashburn, Va.
- Jenna Smith - Kent Place School
Scotch Plains, N.J.
- Margaret Ludwig - Mat-Su Career and Technical High School
Wasilla, Alaska
Runners-Up - (4) $500 Scholarships
- Olivia Rodgers - Quincy Senior High School
Quincy, Ill.
- Deepa Rao - James Madison High School
Vienna, Va.
- Lily Cain - Northwestern High School
Poplar, Wis.
- Anjana Peddireddi - Centerville High School
Dayton, Ohio
Thanks to everyone who entered this year. We received nearly 3,000 entries from across the entire country and enjoyed reading so many different takes on why free speech is a better idea than censorship. We’ll be publishing more of the winning essays, so keep an eye out for those. Rising juniors and seniors can enter again when we reopen the essay contest for the 2021–2022 school year in September.
Recent Articles
FIRE’s award-winning Newsdesk covers the free speech news you need to stay informed.