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Organizational History
The Concord Review was started in March 1987 by Will Fitzhugh during a sabbatical from the high school in Concord, Massachusetts. The
goal was to find and acknowledge exemplary history research papers by
high school students in the English-speaking world, and to distribute them
in a quarterly journal to inspire more reading of history books and more work
on history research papers by other high school students.
It is still the only journal in the world for the academic papers (in any subject) of secondary students.
The organization was incorporated as a nonprofit, tax-exempt
corporation in Massachusetts in June of 1987, and nonprofit 501(c)(3)
status was granted in June of 1988.
In August 1987, a brochure calling for papers was sent to every high school in the
United States and Canada and 1,500 schools overseas. By the Spring of
1988, a good number of papers had been submitted and there were
subscribers in 14 states and 4 other countries.
By Summer 2010, the journal has published 82 issues, with 891 history papers by high school
students in 44 states and 38 other countries. There have been
subscribers in 42 states and 32 other countries so far.
High schools in California, New Mexico, Singapore, and Thailand have class sets of the journal for their students.
In 1995, the Ralph Waldo Emerson Prizes were established and they
have now been awarded to 72 students published in The Concord Review.
Almost all of their essays are on this website. The prizes were $3,000, and
went to five authors each year, but they are now only $1,000, as our only major funder has pulled out.
In 1998, we started the National Writing Board, to assess and report
on high school history papers. We have now provided an independent
evaluation of papers from 31 states and sent our three-page reports, at
the request of the authors, to Deans of Admission at 79 colleges.
Thirty-nine colleges now endorse this assessment service, including Harvard, Michigan, Princeton, Stanford, Virginia, and Yale.
In 2002, TCR Institute was created to study academic work by high school students. Our first study, of the state of the history term paper in U.S. public high schools, is on this site in pdf.
In 2002, the National History Club was started to promote the
reading, writing, discussion and enjoyment of history in secondary
schools. There are now more than 400 chapters at schools in 43 states, with more
than 10,000 members. There is a newsletter twice a year describing some
of the activities of the chapters. The National History Club has been separated from The Concord Review, and is now under new management.
In 2003, we started the Concord Review Society, a membership
organization for authors published in the The Concord Review since 1988.
We provided a newsletter for members twice a year. There are no longer any funds for this work.
With all of these efforts we have sought to promote the reading of
nonfiction books and the writing of academic expository research papers
by secondary students. We believe that students who have read some
nonfiction books and written a serious history research paper or two will be
much better prepared for the academic demands of college life.
The Concord Review, Inc. is a tax-exempt, 501(c)(3) non-profit Massachusetts corporation. This corporation
includes The Concord Review, the Consortium for Varsity Academics®, the Ralph Waldo Emerson Prizes, the National Writing Board, TCR Institute, and the Concord Review Society.
730 Boston Post Road, Suite 24
Sudbury, Massachusetts 01776 USA
1-800-331-5007 or (978) 443-0022
E-mail: [email protected]
Staff
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Will Fitzhugh, Founder and President
The Concord Review, Inc.
[email protected] |
Photo: Sarah Evans/Education Week |
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