At a glance
The NHD route.
Students choose a historical topic, connect it to the annual theme, research with primary and secondary sources, and present an argument through one of five contest formats.
2027 Theme: Innovation in History
The theme asks students to study innovation as a historical force. A strong project should explain what changed, why the innovation mattered, who was influenced, and whether the impact was limited, uneven or contested.
Impact
The direct consequences of an innovation: what changed in people's lives, institutions, power, knowledge, economies or culture.
Influence
The way an innovation spread, inspired imitation, provoked resistance, reshaped later decisions or altered how people imagined what was possible.
Change
The short-term and long-term transformation caused by innovation, including who benefited, who lost power and what stayed the same.
HisPol lens
Do not choose a topic because it is simply a famous invention. Choose a topic where you can prove why the innovation emerged, how people responded, and how its consequences can be measured over time.
2027 Dates To Watch
The 2027 theme is confirmed, but the official NHD China and National Contest date pages may lag behind the theme announcement. Use this as the HisPol planning calendar until the China affiliate publishes its exact 2027 deadlines.
Theme launch
Introduce Innovation in History, test possible topics and reject projects that are only invention stories.
Topic approval and research
Confirm each student's topic, source base, category choice and first historical argument.
Project build
Draft, design, cite and test entries against category rules before registration deadlines arrive.
Mock judging and affiliate window
Prepare interviews, check rule compliance and update this page when NHD China confirms its date.
What Judges Want
Judges evaluate every category through the same big split: historical quality counts for 80%, while clarity of presentation counts for 20%.
Historical Quality: 80%
- A clear historical argument, not just a report.
- Strong primary and secondary research.
- Historical context, multiple perspectives and change over time.
- A direct, meaningful relationship to the annual theme.
Clarity of Presentation: 20%
- Structure that makes the argument easy to follow.
- Visuals, media and design choices that support the argument.
- Student voice: analysis in the student's own words.
- Clean mechanics, citations and category-specific rule compliance.
Interview preparation
For exhibit, website and paper entries, students are interviewed by judges during their judging time. For documentary and performance entries, students show the project first and then answer questions.
Project Formats
NHD offers five categories. Documentary, exhibit, performance and website can be individual or group entries; paper is individual only. Groups normally include two to five students.
Documentary
A ten-minute film using images, video, sound and narration to prove a historical argument.
Exhibit
A museum-style display that uses objects, images, documents and concise writing to guide viewers through the argument.
Performance
A live dramatic interpretation where script, staging and historical evidence work together.
Paper
An individual research paper suited to students who want maximum space for written analysis.
Website
An interconnected set of pages built in NHDWebCentral if the project will compete.
Website Entry Essentials
Because HisPol is already building for the web, the website category is a natural fit. A contest website is more restricted than a normal school website, so the rules need to shape the design from the start.
- No more than 1,200 visible student-composed words.
- Optional multimedia should stay within the permitted total run time.
- Visuals and quotes need credits on the website.
- External links are not allowed in the site itself except through the annotated bibliography.
- The process paper and annotated bibliography should be integrated as PDFs.
- The bibliography should separate primary and secondary sources, with concise annotations.
Possible HisPol Topic Directions
The best topic is narrow enough to research deeply and broad enough to prove significance. These are starting directions, not final titles.
China and East Asia
Movable type, paper money, the Grand Canal, Self-Strengthening technologies, Meiji industrial policy, postwar electronics.
Politics and Institutions
Secret ballots, constitutional courts, public health systems, census methods, social insurance and diplomatic communication.
War and Diplomacy
Radar, codebreaking, railways, telegraphy, nuclear strategy, peacekeeping systems and international law institutions.
Science and Society
Printing, vaccination, sanitation, industrial machinery, environmental monitoring, computing and digital archives.
Suggested HisPol Planning Cycle
Launch and topic testing
Introduce the theme, build a longlist, reject topics that are too broad, too recent or too thin in sources.
Research and argument
Begin with secondary sources, gather primary sources, write a two or three sentence historical argument.
Build the project
Draft the process paper, create the annotated bibliography and build the selected category entry.
Mock judging and revision
Run practice interviews, test rule compliance, refine analysis and prepare for the affiliate contest window.