Schools
The Brookhaven National Merit $2,500 Scholarship Winners
The 2019 National Merit $2500 Scholarship winners were announced Wednesday. See the Brookhaven, Chamblee and Dunwoody winners.
Brookhaven, Chamblee and Dunwoody students have been named winners of the 2019 National Merit $2,500 Scholarship. The merit scholar winners, announced Wednesday, were among 2,500 winners nationwide and were selected from a pool of more than 15,000 finalists.
Wednesday’s announcement is the second group of winners to be announced this year. In April, more than 1,000 recipients of the corporate-sponsored Merit Scholarship were named.
A panel of college admissions officers and high school counselors judged the students based on their accomplishments, skills and potential for success in rigorous college courses, the National Merit Scholarship Corporation said in a release. The judges looked at grades, difficulty of courses, standardized test scores, contributions and leadership both in school and in the community, an essay and a recommendation from a high school official.
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The number of winners in each state was proportional to the state’s share of the nation’s graduating high school seniors. Additional winners will be named in June and July. By the end of the year, about 7,600 students will have won merit scholarships totaling more than $31 million. The money can be put toward any regionally accredited college or university in America.
Here are the winners from Brookhaven, Chamblee and Dunwoody schools:
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Alice Bai
- Probable career field: Psychology
- Chamblee Charter High School
Isabella C. Hay
- Probable career field: Chemical Engineering
- Marist School
Natalie M. Selover
- Probable career field: Economics
- Marist School
Alyssa Y. Wu
- Probable career field: Biomedicine
- Chamblee Charter High School
Alice Barbe
- Probable career field: Engineering
- Dunwoody home school
Noah M. Covey
- Probable career field: Computer Science
- Dunwoody High School
Lydia R. Fletcher
- Probable career field: Public Policy
- Dunwoody High School
Sarah Rose Kaufman (Dunwoody resident)
- Probable career field: Engineering
- Galloway School
Elizabeth Shaffner (Dunwoody resident)
- Probable career field: Industrial Engineering
- Veritas Classical Schools
Rohan J. Misra
- Probable career field: Quantitative Analysis
- Chamblee Charter High School
The merit scholarship program was created in 1955. Students in grades nine through 12 vie for academic recognition and financial support. About 1.6 million students take the qualifying test every year and about 50,000 of the highest scorers have the chance to be considered.
Patch national staffer Dan Hampton contributed to this report.
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