Welcome to the Kaplan Award, showcasing student work from the UW Journalism and Public Interest Communication Program.

This site features work from students in our narrative journalism course. Narrative journalism is a genre of feature writing that combines rigorous reporting with fiction-writing techniques and eschews dramatic, news-making events to focus on everyday life and ordinary people.  The genre is not new—some scholars trace its beginnings to the days before mass-circulation newspapers. It flourished spectacularly in the 1960s and 1970s when the so-called “new journalists”—Tom Wolfe, Truman Capote, Norman Mailer, Joan Didion, Jimmy Breslin, Gay Talese, Gloria Emerson, Michael Herr, Lillian Ross, and Hunter S. Thompson—deployed literary techniques to counter the staid reporting of the establishment press. Also known as literary journalism, immersion journalism, creative nonfiction, and even the new, new journalism—narrative journalism has continued to prosper as an alternative to the news industry’s glut of dumbed-down and formulaic news.

For more than a decade, University of Washington students have had the opportunity to try out for themselves this flourishing genre of creative non-fiction writing. The narrative journalism course was developed by Deb Kaplan, who joined the UW Communication Department after a notable career as a journalist at the Detroit Free Press and other daily newspapers, as well as the editor of Detroit Metro, a paper for street people and the underprivileged. After Deb died in 2006, her brother, Gordon, endowed the Kaplan Awards, which are given each year for the top works of narrative journalism by UW students. Deb—who was inspired to “give voice to the voiceless,” as her brother put it—believed in the use of immersion style reporting, and she worked in the fields with migrant workers and slept in a tent in homeless camps while researching her own stories. The class has continued to be taught by UW faculty in Deb’s spirit, and the awards reflect her concerns about social justice and treatment of marginalized people.

The awards are given in five categories:

  1. A story about people on the margins
  2. A story involving an important public issue
  3. A human personality profile (proving that there is a “story” in anyone’s life)
  4. A story that demonstrates an “epiphany” (or a deeper story)
  5. A story with a strong writing style

Here you can see examples of the impressive writing talents of UW students who have been given the opportunity to “think outside the box” and to produce journalism that seeks to demonstrate many of the qualities of literature.

About Deborah Kaplan:

Every year, the Department of Communication gives five outstanding students a Kaplan Award for their excellence in narrative writing in the categories of: people on the margins, strong writing style, a human personality profile, a strong epiphany, and an important public issue. This award is presented in honor of Deborah Kaplan, who was known for her no-quit attitude, relentless investigative reporting, and in-depth interviewing. After joining the faculty of the UW Department of Communication in 2003, Kaplan experienced an apparent heart attack, which led to an unexpected death in 2006 at age 53.

But her legacy in journalism lives on. Born in Chicago to parents who weren’t afraid to participate in avid activism, Kaplan chose a different path than her two siblings who both became attorneys. Kaplan became the Metro Times news editor from 1989 to 1991, after four years at the Detroit Free Press. She was recognized for illuminating the lives of ordinary and overlooked people – sleeping in tents to report about the homeless, working in the fields to write about migrant workers, and sitting through countless patriot group meetings to find out about their politics.

Upon leaving the newspaper industry, Kaplan started a tabloid produced by inner-city teens and returned to college to finish her undergraduate degree. She continued her education by earning a master’s in social science at the University of California-Irvine and a doctorate in journalism and mass communication at the University of North Carolina. While teaching narrative journalism as an assistant professor at the UW, Kaplan started a website for students to showcase their work – now the goal of the Kaplan Quarterly.

Kaplan Award Stories

By Ashley Bergeson Fall 2013 Kaplan Award Winner  Once, it was summertime. Warm, yellow light streamed into the room where I was napping; the room at my grandmother’s house made up especially for me. As I laid back with my eyes open, staring up at the dust circles illuminated by the late afternoon sun, I … Read More

By Nicole Bergman Fall 2013 Kaplan Award Winner Yet again, I find myself sitting in a 1970s four door Mercedes without air conditioning. The interior is ancient and the seat upholstery is worn; the dashboard is covered with fast food wrappers and Styrofoam coffee cups. I am submerged in a heap of crap while obnoxious … Read More

By Janelle Retka Fall 2013 Kaplan Award Winner It was the third or fourth day spent pressed up against bleached white hospital walls. The waiting room of the ICU was filled with tension; the most I had experience in this hall since we arrived. The doctors would be meeting with Seth and his mom, Debbie, … Read More

By Rebecca Yeung Fall 2013 Kaplan Award Winner My new roommate this year grew up in the east side of the state, and this was her first year in Seattle. I decided to take her out and explore downtown Seattle. I am not a Seattle native, but have been living here for a few years. … Read More

By Nicole Bergman Fall 2013 Kaplan Award Winner Four college sophomores are seated in a white Subaru outback headed East. The right passenger seat is folded down to make room for the hockey bags stacked in the trunk, forcing Jack and Ethan to sit uncomfortably close to each other. Spencer reaches back and hands the … Read More

By Cooper Inveen Fall 2013 Kaplan Award Winner Let’s just say, you’ve never truly lived until you’ve watched a topless doppelganger of a childhood friend’s mother fight another woman to the death underneath a giant geodesic cage. Well okay, it wasn’t exactly a fight to the death; the fight was completely consensual and the only … Read More

By Joshua Glantz Fall 2012 Kaplan Award Winner  My eyes finally open after what feels like hours, but likely was a matter of seconds stuck in that purgatory between REM and consciousness where you know you’re sleeping but you can’t wake up. The drag of the aluminum on the pavement is as painful as nails … Read More
By Trennesia Jackson Fall 2012 Kaplan Award Winner “Bzzzzzzzzzzzz” “Mommy the cookies! I think their done” As my mom opens the gargantuan black machine I once thought was a time machine, but now know it as the oven, and pulls out the sheet of golden brown chocolate chip cookies, my stomach begins to leap with … Read More

By Bo Johnson Fall 2012 Kaplan Award Winner With patience and hard work dreams do come true. This mantra still rang with truth and optimism when I was in eighth grade, thirteen, and in love. I had woken up from a marvelous dream, one of those dreams where waking stings like a pistol whip. In … Read More

By Zachary Kirshbaum Fall 2012 Kaplan Award Winner “We might,” my mother said with difficulty, half glancing at my father, who was sitting in his usual chair across the room. My brother looked over at me, perhaps expecting some reaction to base his own off of after hearing the near confirmation of my parents’ divorce. … Read More