Take a picture of your Red Ribbon decoration (preferably with people in it!) and upload to www.redribbon.org.


most-educational-carley-welborn_original

Win Prizes for the National Red Ribbon Week Photo Contest!

Amazon Sidebar Checks

Want to win an iPad and $1,000 for your school? Submit a home or school decoration with this year’s Red Ribbon theme during the National Red Ribbon Photo Contest, open October 1 – November 1

Source: JustThinkTwice.gov

Enter the Red Ribbon Photo Contest, open October 1 – November 1!

Win An iPad & $1,000 For Your School

TWO WAYS TO ENTER:

1. Families may submit a photo of a home decoration, and

2. Schools may submit a photo of a school decoration

Here’s how it works:

DECORATE

Families, decorate your HOME front door, mailbox or fence with a (double-looped) Red Ribbon and this year’s theme:  “Life Is A Movie, Film Drug Free.™”

Schools, decorate your SCHOOL campus with a (double-looped) Red Ribbon and this year’s theme: “Life Is A Movie, Film Drug Free.™”

Red Ribbon Photo Contest 2024 requirements
SNAP A PHOTO & UPLOAD

Take a picture of your Red Ribbon decoration (preferably with people in it!) and upload to www.redribbon.org. You must be 18 years old to enter, so parents (or for school entries, school staff, or PTA members) must submit the photos.

GET VOTES!

Ask your friends, family, colleagues and school contacts to vote for your photo on the redribbon.org website.

Entries with the most votes will win an iPad and $1,000 for a local K-12 school. 

GET STARTED TODAY!

For more details and a list of terms and conditions, visit the Red Ribbon Photo Contest webpage:

See the 2023 winning submissions!

What inspired winners of the 2022 National Red Ribbon Week Photo Contest?

Spilling Beans

Article posted by:

Amazon Sidebar Checks
Vamos a chismear…

  • Welcome, Aggies, to the Era of “Name, Image and Likeness”

  • Welcome, Aggies, to the Era of “Name, Image and Likeness”

    This past April, the NCAA moved closer to a comprehensive and universally agreed upon position when it comes to student athletes ability to retain owndership of the rights associated with their individual name, image and likeness. It’s about time.