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Students display their projects at their school, and teachers or judges choose the projects that will advance to the Regional competition. Depending on school size, the school fair may be very large or take place within one classroom. Teachers determine when their school will host a competition, or a showcase night. You should check with your teacher to find out the date for your school contest.
School-level History Day events can serve several important purposes. A school event can be a culminating activity in which all students participate. School events can showcase the academic accomplishments of students to the community, parents, and school administration. You can also use this event to narrow down the number of entries that you are allowed to send to the Regional level of competition.
In Minnesota, keep in mind that not all categories of History Day projects are judged at the Regional level. Exhibits, Documentaries, Performances, and Websites will be evaluated at the Regional level of competition. Papers are evaluated in an off-site competition, which has a separate submission deadline. Please visit the Minnesota History Day websites for more information on this process.
Complete the Participation Survey from Minnesota History Day. In Minnesota, the lead teacher at each school must submit a Participation Survey for their school. This lets us know how many entries you have at your school and helps us plan for Regional contests. Using this information, we will let you know how many entries your school can advance to the Regional level of competition. Learn more about the allotment process by watching our video.
Select a date and timeframe for the event. Selecting a date for your event will depend not just on your classroom calendar, but also on the date of your Regional competition. You will want to select a school event date that will give your Regional qualifiers enough time to register and revise their projects. Registration materials for regional competitions are due two weeks before the contest.
In selecting a timeframe for your event, you will have to decide if you want a school-day event or an afterschool competition. There are advantages and disadvantages to each.
Reserve spaces, tables, and technology. You will need several different types of spaces to host a History Day event.
Invite parents and community members. Once you have a date set, be sure to notify parents and get the event on the school calendar.
Recruit judges. The number of judges you are going to need is going to depend on the number of projects you have to be judged. Even though you may not have a final schedule, start recruiting judges early. You can rough out a number based on the following factors:
Confirm with judges. As judges confirm their attendance, send them more information on what to expect at the event. Considering sending event details, the theme sheet, and a description of the judging process.
Make a schedule. Once you know how many projects you will have in each category, you can begin to draft a schedule. If you are holding an afterschool event, you will want to ask parents if there are scheduling conflicts with other activities so you can schedule students earlier or later in the event. See the sample schedule on the following pages for ideas.
Prepare materials for judges. You will need to make copies of comment sheets (one per judge per entry), judge instructions, theme sheets, sample questions, results sheet, and the presentation schedule. If you have Paper and Website entries at your event, you should try to get the judges copies of the papers or URLs in advance. Performance judges will need stopwatches. Exhibit judges will need clipboards.
Food and drink: If your event is over the lunch hour or dinner hour, you will want to think about providing your judges with something to eat. This doesn’t have to be an elaborate meal, but will be appreciated by your volunteers.
Set-up a welcome station. Especially when judges are unfamiliar with your school, it’s helpful to have a welcome station set-up near the main entrance to direct them to the right room. You can also direct students here as main area for questions and help.
Put up signage. You’ll need signage directing people to the judge room and to various judging locations. Also consider posting a judging schedule outside of each room, so people know which presentations will be coming up.
Present a judge orientation. You will need to provide a judge orientation that describes the schedule for the event as well as the History Day judging criteria. Consider using the orientation on the following pages as a basis for your orientation.
Results. You will need to know your school’s allotment numbers for your Regional competition to figure out how many projects your judges will be able to advance. If you are holding an afterschool event, it may be best to wait to announce the winners until the next day. You can order school recognition ribbons from Minnesota History Day or create certificates on your own.
Thank judges and donors. If you can time your thank you note to judges after your Regional competition, you should thank them for their assistance as well as let them know which projects might be moving on to State. Keep this list of contacts for next year’s judge recruitment!
Notify the media. Community newspapers may be interested in hearing about your event as well as those students who are moving on to the next level of competition.
Get ready for the next level of competition. Provide your Regional qualifiers with information and registration materials so they can prepare for the next level of competition. Students are allowed and encouraged to improve their projects between competitions. Check with the History Day staff to see about Feedback Sessions, at which students can meet with History Day staff and discuss their work.
Planning tools
Judge instructions
Visit our Judge Training page for all judging materials.
Evaluation rubrics
Each judge will need one copy for each project they view