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Media, Law & Policy

Newhouse student wins national New York Times essay contest

Wednesday, May 4, 2011, By Wendy S. Loughlin
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Newhouse School of Public Communications

Caitlin Dewey, a senior magazine major in 黑料不打烊鈥檚 , is the winner of this year鈥檚 Modern Love: College Essay Contest, sponsored by The New York Times. The paper asked college students to describe what love is like for them.

deweyDewey鈥檚 winning essay, 鈥淓ven in Real Life, There Were Screens Between Us,鈥 was published in The New York Times on May 1. It beat out more than 1,400 entries from 370 colleges and universities across the United States, including Harvard, Columbia,聽Yale聽and top journalism schools such as聽Northwestern University聽and the University of Missouri.

When she first learned she had won, 鈥淚 felt shocked,鈥 Dewey says. 鈥淧rofoundly, entirely shocked. I actually started screaming. I entered the contest with no real expectation of even placing, so when I won I felt overwhelmed and grateful and totally surprised. The whole thing was very surreal.鈥

Dewey gives a nod to the magazine department and, in particular, professor Melissa Chessher for helping hone her skills. 鈥淲e learned essay writing in [Chessher鈥檚] MAG 406 class last semester, and I had very little idea what a personal essay looked like before I took that class,鈥 says Dewey.

Chessher is not surprised by Dewey鈥檚 win. 鈥淔rom the first assignment in magazine article writing, I knew Caitlin possessed the talent and the work ethic to be a great writer,鈥 she says. 鈥淣ot only did she bring challenging ideas to the table, but she was determined to land the hard interviews and return to the subject until she found the perfect, telling moment for her piece. She arrived with an eye for detail and willingness to revise and revise again. All I did was cheer and get out of the way.鈥

Dewey, also an international relations and Spanish major in SU鈥檚 College of Arts & Sciences, will graduate this month. As a News21 fellow, she will work on a digital reporting project with a team of other Newhouse students in the Lehigh Valley until late July, after which she will move to Washington, D.C., where she will work as the web content producer for Kiplinger’s Personal Finance magazine.

  • Author

Wendy S. Loughlin

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