Schools
Haddonfield Seniors Are National Merit Scholarship Semi-Finalists
Semi-finalists for the scholarship were announced on Wednesday.
HADDONFIELD, NJ — Two Haddonfield Memorial High School students have been named semi-finalists for the 2020 National Merit Scholarship Program. One senior who lives in Haddonfield and attends Bishop Eustace Prep in Pennsauken also made the list.
The semi-finalists were announced on Wednesday and include approximately 16,000 high-school seniors that will go on to compete for the scholarships that will be offered next spring. According to a press release from the National Merit Scholarship Program, over 90 percent of the semi-finalists will be named as finalists for the scholarship. Of those finalists, about half will win a scholarship.
More than 1.5 million students applied for the highly competitive scholarship and the semi-finalists represent less than 1 percent of all high-school seniors in the U.S. For each state, the number of semi-finalists is proportional to that state’s percentage of the total graduating seniors in the country.
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Here are the semi-finalists for the scholarship from Haddonfield Memorial High School:
- Carly E. Griffin; and
- Pierre Yan.
Andrew H. Pasco, of Haddonfield, was also named a semifinalist. He attends Bishop Eustace Prep in Pennsauken. He was the only student from that school who was named a semifinalist.
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All juniors are automatically enrolled when they take the PSATs; a score above 212 earns them National Merit "commended" recognition. That is about 50,000 of the highest-scoring students in the nation.
From there, the semi-finalists are further winnowed down by state, and the number per state is in proportion to a state's population (i.e., New Jersey will have more National Merit semi-finalists than North Dakota.)
There are about 16,000 semi-finalists nationwide, representing less than 1 percent of all high-school seniors in the U.S.
Students must then apply to become a finalist. The student and their high school must submit a detailed application. The application must contain information about a student’s academic record, leadership abilities, the honors and awards they’ve received and more.
All of those chosen as semi-finalists will go on to compete for the scholarships that will be offered next spring. More than 90 percent of the semi-finalists will be named as finalists for the scholarship. Of those finalists, about half will win a scholarship to attend college.
Students will find out in February whether they make it to the finalist stage. The average NMS scholarships are only worth about $2,500, but to even be considered a semi-finalist is prestigious in the academic world.
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