So, Youre Coordinating a Writing Contest
by
Emily Cotler
What, are you nuts?
Coordinating a writing contest is ridiculously time-consuming and largely thankless. It
will cause your mailbox to swell. Your dining room table will be taken over by an invasion
of large envelopes and address lists and self-addressed-stamped-postcards. The word tyvek
will take on new meaning in your life.
Still want to do it? Yes? Really? Bless you. Thank you. Every member of your chapter
has just breathed a lungfull of relief that the position has been filled and they
wont be solicited for the post.
Now that youre locked in, heres the bomb: your scoresheet needs work and
you need to come up with guidelines and charts.
Charts? What? There were no charts in the job description. No, but maybe there should
have been. Coordinating a writing contest is more than soliciting volunteer judges and
making countless trips to the post office. Its up to you to make the contest better.
Here are a few tips on how.
- The scoresheet. Look at it carefully. How straightforward is it? Where are its
ambiguities? Most importantly, does it address the theme of the contest itself. What did
last years feedback from judges and contestants target as good and weak points. Pass
it around your chapter before the actual contest and ask for suggestions. Is the
scoresheet fair? If not, consider it a bad hair-do and change it. For instance, some
common problems with many scoresheets are hero/ines motivation, or external
conflict. Are these things really discernible and crystal clear to a reader in the first
chapter or two? Should an entrant be docked points if she has decided to hold off telling
all in the first thirty pages? Are there points allocated to writing voice? Pacing? Title?
Originality? Cleverness of plot? Maybe there should be.
- Guidelines. Consider enclosing a set of judging guidelines with each judges
packet. Guidelines that specifically recommend how to evaluate particular points will
streamline the interpretation of the scoresheet and therefore of the contest itself. (See
So, youre judging a writing contest...-March HeartBeat.)
- Charts. Several contests enclose ranking charts when they send entries back to entrants.
The word on the street is that these charts are greatly appreciated. Of course there is no
need to display the rankings so that Jane Writer, author of Bad Beating Hearts is
advertised by name and book title as being the lowest scoring entrant. Youre not
trying to make some poor woman eat a lot of chocolate. Rather a listing of entries by
number, and then a charting of judges scores with the finalists identified in some
fashion is a safe, decent, and informative method in which to give all entrants a clear
picture of how they finished against the pack. Entrants find it very helpful in
interpreting judges scores if they can see how they fared against that particular
judges average. Detroits Between the Sheets contest gives great chart. Ask
them for a sample.
Of course, a good contest coordinator encourages feedback and makes it easy for all
participants to give it. My own two cents: I think there should be an industry-wide change
from the word CONTEST to the word COMPETITION. Contest connotes a crap shoot or a lottery,
whereas Competition brings the idea of entrants vying through skill for a top spot. But
then again, I can only suggest since I am not nuts enough to be a contest coordinator. My
admiration to those of you who are.
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