Seventeen students from Thales Academy Apex (TMSA) in North Carolina have travelled to Tampa, Florida, to compete in one of the United States’ most prominent student media competitions, marking a significant milestone for the school’s developing broadcast and film programme.
The students are participating in the Student Television Network (STN) National Convention, held between 27 February and 3 March 2026, an event that has attracted more than 4,000 students from over 150 middle and high schools nationwide. For TMSA, this is the first time it has entered the national-level contest, placing its relatively young programme alongside some of the most established student media departments in the country.
The convention is widely regarded within US education and media circles as a key training ground for future broadcasting and production talent. Many participating schools operate student-run media units that mirror professional newsrooms and production studios, reflecting the increasing importance of technical media skills within the wider creative economy.
TMSA’s Film Club is entering a range of competitive categories designed to simulate real-world production environments. Among the most demanding is the “Crazy 8’s” contest, scheduled for Saturday, 28 February. The format requires teams to conceptualise, write, film, edit and deliver a finished production within eight hours.
Students must complete their projects under strict deadline pressure, producing work across formats including short film, documentary, action short, vertical film, newsmagazine or morning show. The compressed timeframe is intended to test not only technical competence but also teamwork, planning and creative decision-making — all key skills in the modern media workplace.
In addition to Crazy 8’s, competitors are taking part in a broad range of specialist contests reflecting different areas of broadcast and digital production. These include Anchor Team, Commentary, Sports Broadcast, Weather, Silent Film, Vlog, Commercial, Movie Trailer, Music Video, Podcast, Human Interest Feature, News Story and Convention Promo. The event will conclude with a formal closing ceremony recognising category winners and overall achievements.
For TMSA, the national appearance represents the culmination of months of preparation and investment in media education. Students have been training since the beginning of the academic year, while teaching staff attended professional development workshops in Miami during the summer to strengthen the school’s technical and instructional approach.
“This is a defining moment for our students and our school,” said Phillip Smith, MFA, TMSA High School Media Production Teacher. “We may be new to the national stage, but our students have put in the work. They’ve trained, practiced, and pushed themselves creatively all year. Now they’re competing against programs that operate at a near-professional level — and they’re ready for the challenge.”
The participation highlights a broader trend within education, where schools are increasingly investing in media production capabilities as demand grows for digital content skills across industries including marketing, entertainment, journalism and corporate communications.
Industry analysts have noted that early exposure to professional-style production environments can provide students with a competitive advantage, particularly as employers seek candidates with practical experience alongside academic qualifications.
TMSA’s entry is also notable given the relative maturity gap between its programme and some of its competitors. Many schools attending the convention have long-established broadcast departments with dedicated studios, specialist equipment and extensive competition histories.
Despite this, the North Carolina students are positioning themselves as emerging contenders, emphasising preparation and adaptability rather than institutional scale.
Participation alone is seen by school leaders as a strategic step in building the programme’s credibility and attracting future student interest. National exposure can help smaller or newer media programmes establish recognition and accelerate development through benchmarking against more experienced peers.
The convention also provides networking opportunities, allowing students to engage with industry professionals, attend workshops and gain insight into evolving production technologies and storytelling formats.
Regardless of the competitive outcome, the event represents a landmark moment for the school’s media initiative, signalling its ambition to expand and strengthen its presence in student broadcasting.
The school has said updates and competition results will be shared with its community as the event progresses, with staff and students viewing the experience as an important foundation for future participation.
For TMSA, the trip to Tampa reflects not only a first national competition entry but also a broader investment in preparing students for careers in an increasingly media-driven economy — one where technical production skills, creativity and deadline performance are highly valued.







