The Achievement Network launched its second student writing contest celebrating Black History Month on February 1, 2024. Students between grades 3-5 in our partner schools responded to standards-aligned prompts accompanying passages featuring prominent Black historical figures in ANet’s Quiz Tool. Teachers were able to grade entries and then submit these students’ entries into our contest submission form.
We received numerous submissions demonstrating rigor and comprehension of grade-level literacy standards. Read the prompts and winning submissions below. Congratulations to our winners and the educators who inspired their work!
Writing Prompt: You have read George Washington Carver: The Peanut Scientist Born 1864 - January 5, 1943, by Fredrick and Patricia McKissack. Imagine you are George Washington Carver. Write a journal entry that reflects on part of his life from his point of view. Be sure to consider common elements of a journal entry and include details about Carver's life that you learned about in the text.
Passage: George Washington Carver: The Peanut Scientist
Born 1864 (?) - January 5, 1943
By Fredrick and Patricia McKissack
Name: Karmin
Grade: 3
Teacher: Cory Miller
School: Marion C. Seltzer
Life works in mysterious ways. One fall morning in 1896, I woke up a little woozy, I got up and checked the mail, it was from Booker T. Washington, I opened it up and read it. It said George will you come and teach in Tuskegee. I thought of all the African American lives I could change! I threw on my clothes and ran. I ran and I felt determined. I found a train and got on it, the train did not smell particularly good at all. It smelled like a wet dog, and no one likes the smell of wet dogs. I found my stop and got off. There I was at the Tuskegee Institute, where I found Mr. Washington and told him that I would be truly honored to teach at his school.
When I walked in there was no lab, barely a room. But I could not give up yet, we used things we found and created a lab for our class. I thought to myself that these young adults are a miracle. The school also had a farm, but the soil worked poorly. I thought the soil needed to rest so we decided to stop planting cotton and began to plant sweet potatoes and then cowpeas. When we grew cotton again it came back stronger than ever. However, our joy was short lived because the Boll Weevil came from Mexico and started eating all the cotton. What should we do now?
Writing Prompt: You have read Mae C. Jemison by Wade Hudson, a passage describing Mae C. Jemison’s journey to becoming the first black woman to travel to space. Imagine you are Mae C. Jemison on your first trip to space. Write a journal entry from Mae’s point of view that describes her feelings and experiences as she travels to space for the first time. Be sure to consider what you’ve learned about Mae’s life from the text.
Passage: Mae C. Jemison
By Wade Hudson
Winner: Dylan
Grade: 4th
Teacher: Leslie Phillips
School: Baton Rouge Center for Visual & Performing Arts
Dear Journal,
It was amazing! It was like becoming president or finding a new species of animals! I was wondering what the people outside were feeling. I was the first woman AND black person that was going to space. Then I felt a rumble, it sounded like a volcano. Then I heard booming voices. FIVE FOUR THREE TWO ONE!!! And we were off, through the atmosphere and stars and planets! It was starting to get pitch black when all the sudden, I started floating! I felt like a bird, flying! As light as a feather. I thought I could fly forever! It was lunchtime. We had peanut butter jelly, from a tube. This was because crumbs would fly everywhere when we ate. It was weird, but I got through it. Then, I did some experiments. I had to look at plants and see how plants lived in space, how they grew, and see if they even survived. Most of the plants survived but were weird shapes. The Earth looked awesome from here, like a blue giant. Dinner was next, it was spaghetti with meatballs, in a tube. Then we all went to bed. We woke up at different times because time is different in space according to Einstein. We did the same thing every day. By the end it was smelly. We started to descend back to the Earth. I was happy and sad at the same time. The adventure to space was great. When we got back to the beautiful blue Earth, there were crowds waiting for us. They cried and cheered, "Yay!" I found my family and they were so happy that I made it back from that amazing space trip. I was in the atmosphere and I could breathe outside again! Oh just how wonderful! Then I went home and I haven't seen it for so long! I went in and started writing in my journal, writing this. Now I'm done and it's ready for you to read!
Yours truly,
Mae
Writing Prompt: You have read "Dreams," a poem by Langston Hughes expressing the importance of holding on to one's dreams. Write your own poetic response that expresses the importance of dreams. Be sure to consider the theme and poetic style of Hughes' poem.
Passage: Dreams
By Langston Hughes
1 Hold fast to dreams
For if dreams die
Life is a broken-winged bird
That cannot fly.
5 Hold fast to dreams
For when dreams go
Life is a barren field
Frozen with snow.
Winner 1: Kyle
Grade: 5th
Teacher: Lauren Senie
School: International School of Louisiana Uptown
Something that i want is probably some more friends
But when it's all up to them, then it depends
I want to make videos,ideas of my own
So when i see a watcher, my videos are shown.
I want to become an artist although i may not be the smartest
I want to spread my creativity, with those who doubt their own ability
I don't wanna be a chef i just wanna be good at cook’in
Because when i taste my moms good foods
My taste buds are quite shook’in
Glad you came and stuck around
And if you did your as bright as a diamond, waiting to be found
I'm just happy you read my poem with all your time that you have loaned
Winner 2: Ezra
Grade: 5th
Teacher: Lauren Senie
School: International School of Louisiana Uptown
They judged us with their eyes and buried us with snow,
but they didn’t know we were seeds waiting to grow.
They tried to take our dreams pushing us back,
but we rose up like an eagle ready to attack.
We flew over them sky high,
and made new history day and night
They kill us with their words,
but again we reigned superb
They kept us from what we needed,
but we came back when they knew we were mistreated
Black is unique, colorful, and vivid
And we stood tall even when we were timid
We tell stories of reclaiming power, songs, and dreams
The color of Black rising behind the scenes.
They judged us with their eyes and buried us with snow,
but they didn’t know we were seeds waiting to grow.
Reminder partners — passages are always available in our quiz tool. Check them out today!