Writing the 10,000-Character Essay
Turn your data into a narrative: structure, theme, evidence, and the discipline of 10,000 characters.
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The essay's job
The essay is "limited to 10,000 characters, including spaces and punctuation" — roughly 1,500-1,800 words. The worksheet frames it well: the essay is your chance to communicate exactly how your team embodies the FIRST Core Values, so use those 10,000 characters wisely. Where the executive summaries are bullet-like facts, the essay is the story that connects them.
Lead with your theme
Judges use the information in the essays to distinguish the outstanding teams, so the essay must do more than restate the summaries. Open with the single message you chose in Getting Organized, then prove it. A reader should be able to state your team's thesis after the first paragraph.
A reliable structure
A proven structure that maps to the three judging columns:
- Hook + thesis (1 short paragraph) — who you are and the one thing you want remembered.
- Spreading the FIRST Mission — teams Started, demos, volunteerism, people Reached who didn't know FIRST.
- Impact on the FIRST community — teams Mentored, events Hosted/Supported, Published Resources and their Reach, workshops.
- Inspiring the STEM Future — participant outcomes, curriculum, Advocacy, non-FIRST STEM support.
- Sustainability — how programs survive student turnover, funding, and succession (judges weight this heavily).
- Growth + close — how the team has grown over 3 years and a forward-looking, inspiring finish.
Evidence over adjectives
The judging guidelines tell judges to compare data carefully and evaluate impact on the total number of people engaged. So every claim should carry a number and a timeframe: "Since 2023, our FLL mentoring program has grown from 1 to 4 schools, reaching 120 students." Avoid empty intensifiers like "amazing" and "passionate."
Respect recency and sustainability
Judges are told to watch out for older claimed outreach: "Team success stories should be within the past 2-3 years." Anchor your strongest examples in the current and prior two seasons. When you mention a program, state how it is sustained year over year, because outreach repeated year over year and successful for the community is explicitly valued.
Handle challenges correctly
Judges are cautious of hard-luck stories. If you discuss an obstacle (lost sponsor, school closure, small membership), immediately show how you overcame it and what you learned. A challenge framed as growth is an asset; a challenge framed as an excuse is a liability.
Edit relentlessly
Write long, then cut to 10,000 characters by removing redundancy with the executive summaries and trimming any sentence without a fact. Read it aloud; if a mentor or alum can't restate your theme afterward, revise. Paste into a character counter before submitting.
Key takeaways
- The essay is capped at 10,000 characters (about 1,500-1,800 words) and tells the connected story behind your data.
- Structure it around the three judging areas plus a dedicated sustainability section, opening with a clear thesis.
- Back every claim with a number and a recent timeframe; frame challenges as overcome, and edit out anything that merely repeats the executive summaries.
Lesson quiz
RequiredAnswer all 3 questions correctly to complete this lesson.
1.What is the character limit for the FIRST Impact Award essay?
2.How should the essay relate to the executive summary responses?
3.What structure do the most effective Impact Award essays generally follow?
Answer every question to submit.