Kay Longcope Scholarship Award

Website: Kay Longcope Scholarship Award

Description

The Kay Longcope Scholarship Award was established in 2008 through a gift from Longcope’s estate and with the guidance of Longcope’s partner Barbara Wohlgemuth. NLGJA is pleased to be home to this unique scholarship opportunity which furthers the vision of founder Leroy F. Aarons and moves forward his belief in the critical role diversity plays in the education of the next generation of newsroom leaders.

The scholarship award will provide up to $3,000 tuition assistance to an LGBTQ student of color who plans a career in journalism and is committed to furthering NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists’ mission of fair and accurate coverage of the LGBTQ+ community.

Recipients of the Kay Longcope Scholarship receive the award at NLGJA’s annual New York Benefit: Headlines & Headliners. Attendance, travel and accommodations are provided by NLGJA.

Guidelines

The scholarship is available only to U.S. citizens or permanent residents who plan to attend a full year of school in the U.S. The scholarship may not be used to pay for course work or credits earned abroad. The scholarship award may pay for tuition only. The amount of the scholarship award will not exceed the student’s annual tuition costs. Awards usually will be disbursed in equal increments at the beginning of each quarter or semester. The Delaware Valley Legacy Fund (DVLF) will work with college or university financial aid offices to determine the best schedule for distributing awards, which will be sent directly to the institution. No payments will be made directly to students. The scholarship award will not exceed the cost of tuition.

Eligibility

Applicants must be an LGBTQ individual of color planning to pursue a career in journalism and be able to demonstrate their passion and commitment to the profession. Selection will be based on journalistic and scholastic ability. Applicants also must demonstrate an awareness of the issues facing the LGBTQ community and the importance of fair and accurate news coverage.

For undergraduates, a declared major in journalism and communications is desirable but not required. Non-journalism majors may demonstrate their commitment to a journalism career through work samples, internships and work on a school newspaper, online news service or broadcast affiliate.

Graduate students must be enrolled in a journalism program.

Applicants must be NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ+ Journalists members in good standing.

Who Can Apply

  • Current or incoming undergrad students enrolled in a U.S. community college or four-year university. Proof of acceptance or current enrollment required.
  • Current or incoming graduate students enrolled in an accredited journalism or mass communications field. Proof of acceptance or current enrollment required.
Student Type
  • freshman
  • sophomore
  • junior
  • senior
  • graduate
Citizen Type
  • US Citizen
Procedure

A complete application package should be submitted electronically. Incomplete applications will not be considered.

Application packages should include:

  • Application (this form)
  • One-page résumé.
  • Five work samples as described below under work samples.
  • Proof of attendance: a letter of acceptance or a letter of enrollment from a U.S. community college or four-year university (contact awards@nlgja.org for exceptions). Scanned copies accepted.
  •  
  • Please send application questions to awards@nlgja.org and include the name of the applicant in the subject line.
  • Write and publish a news story to Tumblr of words and multimedia. Pick one story topic:
    • Profile a senior LGBTQ activist in your community. Use text, video, audio, stills, and/or infographics to show this person’s story and role in the community.
    • Address a legislative initiative in your community that impacts the LGBTQ population. Use text, video, audio, stills, and/or infographics to show the impact.
    • Cover an LGBTQ event in your community. Use text, video, audio, stills, and/or infographics to cover different aspects of the event.
    • Have a great idea that’s not mentioned here? Pitch it to our staff: aarons@nlgja.org.

Any audio or video element should be between 2 and 5 minutes. Photo galleries should have between 10 and 30 photos. Infographics should be limited to two graphics. Text should be no more than 750 words. 

Stories do not require all elements, but should be designed for online consumption where users expect a rich multi media presentation. 

  • Official transcript, scanned digital copies accepted. Please mail physical copies to:
    • Longcope Scholarship – NLGJA
      2120 L St NW, Suite 850
      Washington, DC 20037

Work Samples

  • Print – Samples written by the applicant and published in a high school, college or community newspaper, magazine or online news service. Samples should be submitted as scans in either *.jpg or *.pdf formats.
  • Video – Should be submitted via e-mail when possible. Embedded video, file downloads or web addresses are also acceptable. Work samples may contain more than one story but should be no longer than 10 minutes.
  • Audio – Should be submitted via e-mail when possible. File downloads or web addresses are also acceptable. Work samples may contain more than one story but should be no longer than 10 minutes.
  • Photographic – Images should be examples of published work from a high school, college or community newspaper, magazine or online news service. Published submissions and/or originals should be submitted in *.jpg, *.pdf, *.tif or *.gif formats.

Please send application questions to Longcope@nlgja.org and include the name of the applicant in the subject line.

History

Journalist Kay Longcope was co-founder of the statewide LGBTQ newsweekly, The Texas Triangle, and is generally regarded as the first out reporter at the Boston Globe newspaper. The pioneering Longcope started writing for the Globe in 1970 and was there for more than twenty years, including tenure as the paper’s religion editor. She died of pancreatic cancer on March 28, 2007.

Service Agreement

Excellence Contract

  • Application and receipt of the Aarons Scholarship will be considered a Contract of Excellence between applicant and NLGJA. The contract commits the student to a level of academic achievement and to a continuing role as a member of NLGJA. Specifically, the contract requires the scholarship recipient to:
  • Maintain a 3.2-point grade average during the academic year that the scholarship is awarded. If the grade point average falls below 3.0, the student may be ineligible to receive subsequent scholarship disbursements.
  • Provide NLGJA with transcripts for each term covered by the scholarship.
  • Originate and complete a project designed to advance the mission of NLGJA. A project can be done in conjunction with class work or work done for student publications, broadcast or online media. Examples of a project include:
    • Produce a project or other body of work for a campus or LGBTQ news organization that focuses on diversity themes.
    • Produce a project or other body of work for a class that focuses on diversity themes. Participate in a campus diversity event where the student will speak or organize a program focusing on the importance of news coverage of diversity issues.
    • Work with a local or student NLGJA chapter to produce a significant program focused on news coverage of diversity issues.
    • Work with an assigned mentor to meet the terms of the contract. The mentor will be responsible for working with the student to conceive and produce the project.
Contact Information

NLGJA
2120 L Street, NW Suite 850
Washington, DC 20037

(202) 588-9888
info@nlgja.org