Schools
Charlotte Students Named 2021 National Merit Semifinalists
Semifinalists will be considered for 2021 National Merit Scholarships. Here's a list of students from Charlotte area high schools.
CHARLOTTE, NC — Charlotte high school students have been named 2021 National Merit Scholarship semifinalists, taking the first step in securing a scholarship in the competitive program.
On Wednesday, the National Merit Scholarship Corporation announced approximately 16,000 semifinalists, representing less than one percent of high school seniors in the U.S. Over 1.5 million students were entered into the competition as juniors by taking the 2019 Preliminary SAT/National Merit Scholarship Qualifying Test. Semifinalists were the highest scoring entrants in each state, and the number chosen from each state is proportional to its share of graduating seniors in the U.S.
Here are the students from Charlotte high schools who have achieved semifinalist status:
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Ardrey Kell High School
- Dev M. Chheda
- Joanna W. Fan
- Nicholas S. Foster
- Grace R. Gardner
- Angela A.Ge
- Aaditi A. Jadhav
- Jiya Jolly
- Zachary M. Minemier
- Varun Murlidhar
- Nikhita S. Nanduri
- Ijay Narang
- Vishva N. Patel
- Shriya S. Pokala
- Sanjana Raj
- Nikhil Saxena
- Srinidhi Subramaniam
- Anna Marie Switzer
- Esha S. Thorat
- Rushil D. Vashee
Charlotte Catholic High School
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- Jacqueline M. Cox
- Emma L. Gatewood
- Sarah J. Schottland
Charlotte Christian School
- Zachary D. Brown
Charlotte Country Day School
- Robyn G. Ardern
- Calvin M. Benson
- Arjunpul S. Brar
- Joseph B. Forsythe
- William H. Gillespie
- Anne D. Jones
- Man Koya
- Patrick K. Moore
- Emma D. Ricks
Charlotte Engineering Early College
- Brett A. Noneman
Charlotte Latin School
- Jack B. DuPuy
- Riley A. Haynie
- Shreyas S. Iyer
- Ethan Li
- Margot K. Neligan
- Zoe N. Spicer
- Joy Yu
- Daniel D. Zhang
East Mecklenburg High School
- Tyler C. Frankel
- Dorothea M. Haskell
- Kieran S. Opela
- Smrithi Tirumalapudi
Harper Middle College High School
- Anushka Chalmeti
Homeschool
- Richard J. Walker
Mallard Creek High School
- Daraja N. Brown
Myers Park High School
- Margaret T. Barr
- Catherine B. Bundon
- Dylan M. Canipe
- Samuel C. Cutler
- Eleanor J. Jeffries
- Brian M. Ramsey
- Ilan Socolovsky-Hull
- Robert S. Starling
- Conner W. White
Northwest School of the Arts
- Ana S. Kisley
Providence Day School
- Kareena S. Gor
- Meera N. Patel
- John P. Sarantou
- Caroline E. Sicard
- John Smith
- Kade M. White
Providence High School
- Sophie A. Liu
- Avery L. Rosen
- Natalie M. Spencer
- Woodson D. Squier
- Meghan E. Wheeler
- Zoe M. Wojnowich
South Mecklenburg High School
- Cameron Alsop
- Gabriel R. Black
- Maxwell Zetina-Jimenez
About 15,000 semifinalists are expected to advance to finalist standing, and over half of the finalists will win about 7,600 National Merit Scholarships worth more than $30 million next spring. To be considered as a finalist, semifinalists must submit a detailed scholarship application with information about the student's academic record, participation in school and community activities, demonstrated leadership abilities, employment, and honors and awards received.
The semifinalist must demonstrate an outstanding academic record throughout high school, be endorsed and recommended by a high school official, and write an essay. Scholarship winners will be chosen based on their skills, accomplishments, and potential for success in rigorous college studies.
There are three kinds of scholarships finalists will compete for, corporate-sponsored, college or university-sponsored and National Merit Scholarship Corporation awards. The National Merit Scholarship Corporation's own $2500 Scholarships will be awarded to 2,500 students on a state-representational basis. Around 1,000 corporate-sponsored scholarships will be provided by about 220 corporations and business organizations for students who meet their criteria. For example, the criteria may include being children of an employee at the sponsoring business or residents of communities where the business has locations or offices. Around 180 colleges and universities are expected to fund about 4,100 awards for finalists who will attend their school.
Winners will be announced in four groups between April and July 2021.
Michael O'Connell, Patch staff contributed
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