Schools

Three Northbrook Students Named Presidential Scholar Candidates

Three seniors from Glenbrook High School District are among less than 0.01 percent nationwide invited to apply for the prestigious honor.

A White House commission named a trio of Glenbrook High School District 225 students as candidates for the 55th edition of U.S. Presidential Scholars Program.
A White House commission named a trio of Glenbrook High School District 225 students as candidates for the 55th edition of U.S. Presidential Scholars Program. (Street View)

NORTHBROOK, IL — Three Glenbrook High School District 225 seniors have been named candidates to become part of the the 2020 class of U.S. Presidential Scholars. Out of an estimated 3.7 million students expected to graduate high school this year, about 4,000 were invited to apply for the prestigious honor this week by the White House Commission on Presidential Scholars.

Former President Lyndon Johnson established the U.S. Presidential Scholars Program with a 1964 executive order, according to the U.S. Department of Education. In 1979, it was expanded to include Presidential Scholars in the Arts honors, and again in 2015 to Presidential Scholars in Career and Technical Education.

Application is by invitation only — students are not nominated by their schools and do not apply to become candidates. The following local students have been invited to apply for selection as Presidential Scholars:

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  • Samuel S. Shin, of Northbrook, Glenbrook North High School
  • Yanchi Wang, of Northbrook, Glenbrook North High School
  • Elizabeth Welch-Jani, of Northbrook, Glenbrook South High School

The list of eligible candidates in the class of 2020 is expected to be narrowed to about 600 semifinalists in April. The White House-appointed commission then selects 161 scholars — 120 in the general component, 20 in the arts and 20 in career and technical educations.

Find out what's happening in Northbrookfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

The winners are then invited to Washington, DC, in June for recognition ceremonies, including a White House-sponsored ceremony with the presentation of Presidential Scholars medallions.


Updated to correct the name of the high school each scholar attends.

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