Contribute

Write the paper you wish you had read.

Tracing Board is written by Brethren, not by editors alone. Most contributors begin with a short paper or a careful question. Every submission is read for tone, clarity, and editorial fit before publication.

What to submit

Six kinds of contribution.

If your idea fits any of these, it is worth preparing for review.

Short paper

A focused educational paper of a few pages on a defined subject — the most common contribution.

e.g. ‘Reading the Senior Warden’s column in the Lodge room’.

Reflection

A brief, considered reflection on a Masonic theme. No need to be exhaustive.

e.g. ‘What the Apprentice taught me about listening’.

Question

A sincere question for the community archive, written so future Brethren can find it.

e.g. ‘How should I begin studying Masonic symbolism?’

Book or resource

A reading recommendation, with a short note on why it is useful and to whom.

e.g. An out-of-print study text worth tracking down.

Event notice

An educational event of interest to Brethren across the District.

e.g. A study evening or visiting lecture.

Committee update

A short note from a District committee or working group on its current educational work.

e.g. A reading list released by Preceptors.

How it works

The editorial process.

A short and predictable pipeline — no surprises.

  1. 01

    You submit

    Send the draft or outline through the approved intake route. Short drafts are welcome.

  2. 02

    Editorial review

    Editors read for tone, clarity, sourcing, and the careful separation of history, interpretation, and allegory.

  3. 03

    Light revision

    Most pieces need a small revision. You will be asked, not edited silently. The voice that publishes is yours.

  4. 04

    Publication

    Accepted pieces are added to the relevant category and, where appropriate, linked from a learning pathway.

Editorial expectations

Tracing Board is held to the standards of careful Masonic education. These expectations apply to every submission, regardless of length.

  • Respectful tone
  • Clear purpose
  • Defined audience
  • Sources where claims need support
  • Honest category — history, tradition, or allegory
  • No plagiarism
  • No confidential or private Lodge matter
  • No inappropriate ritual disclosure
  • No unsupported or sensational claims