2023 High School Production Awards

Mid-Atlantic High School Student Production Awards

STUDENT MEMBERSHIP
NATAS has no student chapters, but it does offer student memberships.

STUDENT AWARDS
Students listed on the entry form for Student Achievement Awards must have been enrolled in an accredited high school or within the Chapter boundaries at the time of production and completion of his/her piece within the eligibility period. Membership is not a requirement for advisors or entrants to submit in the Student Production Awards.

Student Production Awards
Crystal pillars are presented to recipients of separate contests among high school and college students, with the intention to recognize outstanding student achievements in production. Rules and category options for Student Production Awards are outlined in the Regional Awards Manual.

Student Productions are those with the content conceived and created by full-time students at a technical/vocational school or high school. Student Productions may not include any professional services and faculty involvement can only be advisory.

THE MID-ATLANTIC CHAPTER OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF TELEVISION ARTS & SCIENCES PRESENTS THE STUDENT PRODUCTION AWARD

STANDARD RULES AND REGULATIONS

Student Production Awards

THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF TELEVISION ARTS & SCIENCES
NATAS is a professional service organization dedicated to the advancement of the arts and sciences of television and related media and the promotion of creative leadership for artistic, educational, and technical achievements within the television industry, best known for the coveted Emmy® Award.

PURPOSE
To recognize outstanding student achievement in production by conferring awards of merit in the Chapter’s designated awards region. The presentation of these awards is intended to be an incentive for the continued pursuit of excellence by those studying media and journalism and to focus public attention on outstanding cultural, educational, technological, entertainment, news and informational achievements by undergraduate college and/or high school students.

STANDARD RULES AND REGULATIONS

ELIGIBILITY

  1. Projects conceived, produced and executed by students at a high school, university, college or technical/vocational school within the Chapter’s designated awards region are eligible for student award consideration.
  2. Returning students who previously worked as professionals are not eligible.
  3. No professional services may have been employed in the production of the entry.
  4. Faculty involvement can only be advisory.
  5. Entrants must be enrolled as a full-time students during the eligibility period
  6. Students may enter work that was produced as a class assignment, extra-curricular assignment, or in conjunction with their academic experience.
  7. Students who perform professional work may enter their work in the professional awards competition, provided they meet all eligibility requirements.
  8. No entry may be submitted to more than one Chapter’s awards.
  9. The entry does not need to have been broadcast, cablecast, or webcast to be eligible.
  10. Entry videos must be as they were originally submitted to their advisor. There may not be any edits to the originally completed video except for edits to bring the entry length within the specified category time limit. When editing for time, use only straight cuts with one second of black to denote where content has been removed.
  11. There is no limit to the number of entries a school may submit in each category.
  12. Pornographic, violent, defamatory, or offensive material is not accepted. The interpretation of the Awards Committee is final and absolute.
  13. Ineligible entries may be disqualified during any phase of the competition.

STUDENT PRODUCTIONS
Students are not considered peer professionals and as such, their regional student productions are not eligible for Emmy® Award recognition. If material is produced as part of a class, for which school credit is received, they are considered a student. If they are paid or working on a project with other “professionals,” and want to enter the Chapter’s Emmy® Award competition, they cannot enter as a student, but instead must pay the appropriate entry fees. The student is then prohibited from entering subsequent student production categories with other classmates.

ENTRY SUBMISSIONS
A teacher, professor, or advisor must approve the entry even if the student handles the submission or upload process themselves. There is no limit to the number of entries a school may submit.

ORIGINAL MATERIAL
At least two-thirds of an entry must consist of original material unless previously produced material has been given some unique and creative treatment. Entrants must specifically identify and give credit to all non-original material included in the entry. This includes music use.

LANGUAGE(S)
Entries in English will be judged by English-speaking professionals. Entries in Spanish must have English subtitles. Entries in other languages may be entered with subtitles. Judging of these entries is subject to the availability of qualified judges who speak the language of the entry. We recommend that entrants in languages other than English or Spanish submit an English-language translation of the narration track.

DOUBLE DIPPING
No single entry may be submitted in its entirety in more than one Programming category. The same student may not be listed on more than one entry for doing the same job using the same work. If a student was responsible for more than one role, they submit the video in the appropriate craft categories to be judged for that particular craft (ie writer, editor, etc.).

ENTRY ERRORS AND OMISSIONS
The National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences assumes no responsibility for the acts or omissions of those individuals or entities submitting entries pursuant to this notice. All submitting entities and/or individuals are advised to review submissions with respect to correct name credits and other information. NATAS shall accept all submissions that are not in conflict with any of its rules and regulations.

INTENTIONAL FALSIFICATION
The faculty advisor warrants that they are the party most responsible for verifying that eligibility requirements have been met. The intentional falsification of production credits or entry credits may be the basis for disqualification.

FEES
While a fee to cover administrative expenses may be charged, there may be no individual student entry fees. Membership is not a requirement for advisors or entrants.

JUDGING AND EVALUATION
Programming Categories are judged on three criteria: content, creativity, and execution on a 10-point scale (maximum 30 points); and Craft Categories are judged on two criteria: creativity and execution (maximum 20 points). Judging panels are to be made up of qualified professional judges. Judges have the option of including constructive comments or feedback, to be returned to the student’s faculty advisor.

AWARDS
A crystal pillar is awarded to the school for entries validated by a professor or advisor. Students responsible for the production will each receive a certificate. Pillars may be purchased for students listed on winning entries after the awards.

RESTRICTION ON THE USE OF EMMY® MARK
Schools may refer to the fact that they are recipients of a NATAS Student Production Award, but may not use the Emmy® name or replica of the Emmy® figure in any form of commercial advertising or promotion.

CHAPTER RULES AND REGULATIONS
CHAPTER BOUNDARIES (DESIGNATED AWARDS AREA):
The Mid-Atlantic Chapter accepts student entries from Pennsylvania (except Erie), New Jersey, Northern Delaware, and the Steubenville, OH/Wheeling, WV market.

ELIGIBILITY PERIOD:  Entries must have been produced in the Mid-Atlantic Region during the eligibility period February 16, 2022- February 15, 2023.

ENTRY DEADLINE:  All entries must be received AND uploaded by 5:00 pm on Tuesday, February 28, 2023. All payments must be received within two weeks of entry submission. Please plan accordingly.

CONTACT INFORMATION:  Executive Dir. Tara Faccenda, tara@natasmid-atlantic.org or 610-859-8886

HOW TO ENTER THE NATAS STUDENT PRODUCTION AWARDS

  • The online system provides everything you need to enter. The entry forms, upload instructions for online judging, payment forms, and membership forms are all available on the site.  Credit card payments are processed through a secure third pary and a receipt is automatically sent to you.
  • To enter, please go to http://natasstudentawards.org/entry_login.php?c=3
  • Then upload your entry. You will need your entry number when you upload. You can also use the link in the confirmation email you receive when you submit your entry through the system.
  • Please send an e-mail to tara@natasmid-atlantic.org if you have any problems.

Review recommended specifications for detailed information regarding the preparation of your video for upload.

All nominated entries will be archived by the Chapter.

PAYMENTS:   Handling fees made online are processed through a secure third party and an automatic receipt will be sent by e-mail.  Otherwise, please make checks payable for $30 per entry to “NATAS Mid-Atlantic” and send to the following address:

NATAS Mid-Atlantic, 85 Overlook Circle, Garnet Valley, PA 19060

DEADLINE FOR ENTRIES:  Online entry forms must be completed and entries uploaded no later than 5:00pm on Tuesday, February 28, 2023.  The earlier you upload, the easier it will be to allow time for adjustments and problems.  Please make a genuine effort to start early to avoid getting caught in a “pipeline jam”.

­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­­UPLOADING YOUR VIDEO:
If this is your first time submitting, read Below for step by step instructions on uploading your video.

Video Upload Step-by-Step:  NOTE: You can only upload 1 video entry at a time.

STEP 1: VERIFY THE ENTRY YOU WILL BE UPLOADING
Make sure you have your e-mail Copy of your Entry. This is where you will reference your Entry ID number and submitter’s e-mail. Both are ESSENTIAL to begin the uploading process. The e-mail also includes a link to upload your video if needed.

On this first page you need to:

  • Select the entry category from the dropdown box.
  • Enter the ENTRY ID Number
    EXAMPLE: H-02-04 – H-02 is the category and 04 is the entry number.
  • Enter your e-mail address that you provided on the entry form.
  • Select Box that you agree to the terms of uploading video.

STEP 2: REVIEW VIDEO FILE UPLOAD INFORMATION

After reading through the instructions on the page and confirming your entry information in the box at the bottom, click on Proceed to Upload Video.

  • Select your video from your computer files by Browsing, be sure that you are uploading the correct file type.
  • Click on UPLOAD
    The Screen will change to show a status bar indicating where the video is in the upload process. Wait for video to upload. Depending on the size of your file it should only take a couple of minutes, however, the longer the entry, the longer the upload process.
    IMPORTANT: DO NOT CLOSE THE BROWSER UNTIL THE UPLOAD IS COMPLETE.
    DO NOT REFRESH THE PAGE OR CLICK THE “BACK” BUTTON ON YOUR BROWSER.
    *If you do so, you will need to re-start the upload process.

            Video Encoding In-Progress

  • Once uploaded, the screen will change for encoding. The status will indicate “processing” until the video is “ready.” (This process will take on average about 2 minutes for each minute of video to complete the 2 encodings but can take considerably longer if the server has a backlog of encoding.)
  • You can keep your browser open while the video is processing; or, you can use the link at the bottom of the page to monitor the encoding process (a new tab/page will open in your browser); or, you can close your browser at this point and return later to finish the approval process
  • When the status shows “ready,” click on the thumbnail or “click here to play video” link to play the video. Watch all the way through. What you see is what the judges will see.
    *If the link does not appear, there was an encoding problem.
  • After watching your video, click on the “Approve or Disapprove Video” link.

Step 3: COMPLETE THE UPLOAD  

  • If the video uploaded and played properly and you approve, select Approve.
  • CLICK FINISH
  • If you do not approve- select “Reject and Delete.” Your video will be deleted and you can upload your video entry again.
  • You have 3 opportunities to upload and approve your video. Once approved, or you’ve uploaded your video 3 times, you will not be able to upload again.
    Please contact the office at tara@natasmid-atlantic.org to have options reset so you can complete the process.
  • *IMPORTANT: Your video is NOT available to the judges until approved!

You will receive an e-mail confirmation once you have completed the upload and approved your video. Your entry is now ready to be judged.

Regional recipients will automatically advance to the National Student Production Awards. Recipients of these national awards will be announced at a live event in the fall of 2020.  For more information visit the website:   http://emmyonline.org/nationalstudent 

HIGH SCHOOL STUDENT PRODUCTION PROGRAMMING CATEGORIES
Note:  The same material may not be entered in more than one programming category.

HS01. Newscast- (Daily Newscast- Trently Prize)
For outstanding achievement in a newscast, produced live, daily, but broadcast, streamed or otherwise distributed as a “live” program. Post edits are not permitted except for the removal of breaks. Entry will be judged on overall content, presentation, enterprise, writing, format, teases, etc.  Time Limit: 30 minutes

HS02.  News:  General Assignment – Serious News
For outstanding reporting achievement in a presentation of timely news, information and current events. Entries may contain spot news coverage, investigations and feature stories on any newsworthy subject. Coverage of controversial issues is welcome. Entries will be judged on the basis of editorial content and pictorial coverage, which demonstrates awareness of broadcast journalistic standards including accuracy and fairness.  Judges will particularly look for well-organized material paying close attention to clearly written narration and appropriate sound bites. Preference will be given to individual pieces demonstrating reporting and field production.  In-studio set-up or anchor link work will not be considered as an asset unless it materially contributes to the editorial content of the individual report. Time Limit:  10 minutes

HS03.  News:  General Assignment – Light News
For outstanding reporting achievement in a presentation of timely news, information and current events. Entries may contain spot news coverage and feature stories on any newsworthy subject. Entries will be judged on the basis of editorial content and pictorial coverage, which demonstrates awareness of broadcast journalistic standards including accuracy and fairness.  Judges will particularly look for well-organized material paying close attention to clearly written narration and appropriate sound bites. Preference will be given to individual pieces demonstrating reporting and field production.  In-studio set-up or anchor link work will not be considered as an asset unless it materially contributes to the editorial content of the individual report. Time Limit:  10 minutes

HS04.  Arts and Entertainment/Cultural Affairs
For outstanding reporting achievement in a presentation of content devoted to cultural or artistic significance. Time Limit: 10 minutes.

HS05.  Music Video
For outstanding achievement in replication, reinterpretation or original material in a music video. Judges will evaluate content, creativity and execution. (Use of copyrighted material is prohibited without written approval.)  Time Limit:  5 minutes

HS06.  Magazine Program (includes weekly news programs)
For outstanding achievement in a program consisting of various stories of regional interest, usually on current events or entertainment in a format that often includes interviews and interspersed with links by presenters who appear in the reports. Could cover “pre-produced” or “recorded and edited” morning announcements. Designed to entertain and inform. Judges will look at the overall content, creativity, and execution of the entire program as a complete product. Time Limit: 30 minutes.

HS07. Long Form
For outstanding achievement in a presentation of a long-form treatment of a single subject. Subject matter can include (but is not limited to) investigations, examinations of social issues, personal relationships, sports lifestyles, music, performing arts, entertainment, fashion and historical retrospectives. Dramatizations or student originated soap operas or plays are permitted. Content creativity and execution will be important elements in judging the entries. Judges will particularly look for well-organized material, paying close attention to clearly written narration and appropriate sound bites. Time Limit:  Minimum 10 minutes – maximum 30 minutes. If the original presentation ran more than 30 minutes, entrants are permitted to make three edits to bring the entry to time.

HS08.  Short Form
For outstanding achievement in a presentation of a short-form treatment of a single subject. Subject matter can include (but is not limited to) investigations, examinations of social issues, personal relationships, sports lifestyles, music, performing arts, entertainment, fashion, and historical retrospectives. Content creativity and execution will be important elements in judging the entries. Judges will particularly look for well-organized material, paying close attention to clearly written narration and appropriate sound bites. Time Limit: Up to 10 minutes.

HS09.  Sports
For outstanding achievement in a presentation or compilation of up to three unedited pieces of sports news and information. In-studio set-up or anchor link work will not be considered as an asset unless it materially contributes to the editorial content of the presentation. Judges will particularly look for well-organized material, paying close attention to clearly written narration and appropriate sound bites. Time Limit:  10 minutes

HS10.  Sports – Live Event
For outstanding achievement in the production of a live or live-to-tape sports event or game.  A composite is required and may include examples of: Show Open, Graphics Package, Use of Replays, Inserted Pre-Produced Segments, Use of Statistical or Other Prepared Material, Highlights, Standard Coverage (e.g. Routine Innings or Downs), and any additional material at entrant’s discretion.  Time limit: 30 minutes.

HS11.  Public Service Announcement (PSAs)- Norman Felsenthal Young Producer’s Award
For outstanding achievement in announcements that effectively focus interest in and marshal support for worthy community or area causes.  Spots may be 5-seconds to 2 minutes in length.

HS12.  Commercial
For outstanding achievement in a production advertising a product, business, service, school, school department or a community or school event that is conceived, written, created and produced for class/school project.  Spots may be 5-seconds to 5-minutes in length.

HS13. Multimedia Journalist (MMJ)
For outstanding achievement by a single individual covering a single or multi-part news story. The MMJ is reporter, writer, photojournalist and editor. Entry may not be submitted in any other programming or craft category. Time Limit: 10 minutes
NOTE: This category is intended for solo projects. Collaborative or group projects must be submitted in one of the other appropriate categories.

CRAFTS CATEGORIES

HS14. Editor 

For outstanding achievement in editing demonstrating the skills of one or more individuals. Entries may contain a single example of the craft, or a composite of material as originally prepared for class or extra-curricular assignment. Time Limit: 15 minutes.

HS15. Talent 

For outstanding achievement in on-camera talent demonstrating the skills of one or more individuals in the areas of news anchoring, reporting, host/moderator, sports play-by-play, analyst, etc.  Entries may contain a single example of the craft or a composite of material as originally transmitted. Time Limit:  15 minutes.

 

HS16. Video Essay
For outstanding achievement by a single individual covering a single or multi-part news story or program. The video essay creator is the photojournalist and editor, weaving together elements captured in the field to tell the story without a reporter or professional talent track. Entry may not be submitted in any other craft or program category. Time Limit:  15 minutes.

NOTE: This category is intended for solo projects.  Collaborative or group projects must be submitted in one of the other appropriate categories.  In addition, Video Essay submissions must not include any on-camera or voice-over narration.  Visual elements, interview soundbites and NAT sound are permitted to tell the story.

(Chapter Note: A video essay is a natural sound package without on-camera or voice-over narration. Visual elements, interview soundbites and natural sound are used to tell the story.)