About the John Locke Essay Competition
The John Locke Essay Competition is one of the most prestigious academic writing competitions in the world for school students. Run by the Oxford-based John Locke Institute, it invites students to write essays of up to 2,000 words in seven subject categories - Philosophy, Politics, Economics, History, Psychology, Theology, and Law - alongside a Junior category for younger students.
The competition attracts entries from students around the world each year, and only a fraction of them - roughly 15% in recent cycles - make the shortlist. A shortlisting is a serious academic distinction in its own right: it means an essay has been judged among the strongest entries globally by a panel of academics.
Atlantic Ivy's 2026 Results: 38 of 41 Students Shortlisted
When the 2026 shortlist was announced in July, 38 of the 41 Atlantic Ivy students who entered the competition were shortlisted - a 93% shortlist rate.
Students entered:: 41 across the competition's subject categories
Students shortlisted:: 38
Shortlist rate:: 93%, more than five times the global average of around 15%
To put that in perspective: a student entering the John Locke Essay Competition without support has, historically, less than a one-in-five chance of being shortlisted. Atlantic Ivy students were shortlisted at a rate of more than nine in ten.
Building on Our 2025 Results
This is our second year preparing students for the competition, and the trajectory matters as much as the headline number. In 2025, our first year, 12 of our 18 students were shortlisted - a 67% rate that already far exceeded the global average.
That 2025 cohort went on to earn two Very High Commendations (awarded to roughly the top 1% of entrants worldwide, in Philosophy and History), a further three High Commendations, and four Commendations. It also included the first Emirati student ever to receive a Very High Commendation.
In 2026 we more than doubled our cohort - from 18 students to 41 - and our shortlist rate rose from 67% to 93%. Scaling a program while improving results is the strongest evidence that a methodology works, rather than a single lucky year. You can see our complete competition record on our results page.
Why Shortlisting Matters for University Admissions
Admissions officers at Oxford, Cambridge, and top US universities look for evidence that a student engages with their subject beyond the school curriculum. A John Locke shortlisting is exactly that kind of super-curricular signal: it shows a student can sustain a rigorous, original argument at near-undergraduate level, judged against international competition.
For students targeting the UK, a shortlisted essay is also powerful raw material - it can anchor a personal statement and give interviewers something substantive to probe. We have written before about how competitions like this strengthen Oxbridge applications.
How We Did It: The Atlantic Ivy Method
Our results come from a structured methodology, not last-minute essay editing.
Strategic question selection:: Before anyone writes a word, mentors help each student choose the question - across all seven categories - where their interests and existing knowledge give them a genuine edge.
Oxford-trained mentorship:: Students work with mentors who know what the competition's academic judges reward: precise argument, engagement with counterarguments, and disciplined use of evidence.
Argument-first drafting:: We build the skeleton of the essay - thesis, structure, objections - before polishing prose. Most unsuccessful entries fail on argument, not writing style.
Multiple revision rounds:: Every essay goes through structured feedback cycles, with 1-on-1 sessions dedicated to sharpening the weakest sections.
Reading before writing:: Strong essays draw on real scholarship. We direct students to the right sources early, an approach we describe in our guide to [building a knowledge pool](/about/blog/building-knowledge-pool-why-well-read-students-succeed).
Our flagship preparation track, John Locke Basics, combines 12 group sessions with 6 hours of individual mentorship, taking students from question selection through to final submission.
What Happens Next
Shortlisted essays now proceed to the final round of judging. Commendations and category prizes will be announced later in the year, with shortlisted candidates invited to the John Locke Institute's events in Oxford. We will update our results as awards are announced - our 2025 students earned commendations up to the top 1% worldwide, and we expect the 2026 cohort to build on that.
Preparing for John Locke 2027
The 2027 competition will open with a new set of questions, but the students who get shortlisted are rarely the ones who start when the questions are released. The reading, argumentation skills, and academic writing habits that produce a top-1% essay are built over months.
If your child is aged 10-18 and interested in entering the 2027 competition, now is the right time to start. Learn more about our John Locke Essay Competition preparation program or book a free consultation to discuss which category suits your child best.
For program inquiries: Visit atlanticivy.com/john-locke-contest or contact our team to discuss preparation for the 2027 competition cycle.