Schools

Fountain Valley Student One of 100 California Achievement Scholarship Semifinalists

A Fountain Valley High School student has been recognized as a National Achievement Scholarship Semifinalist.

Reported by Nicole Mooradian:

A senior from the Huntington Beach Union High School District is a National Achievement Scholarship Program Semifinalist, the National Merit Scholarship Corporation announced last Wednesday.

Caroline Moore of Fountain Valley High School is one of more than 1,600 high school students competing for about 800 Achievement Scholarship awards, which recognize "academically promising black students throughout the nation," according to the NMSC.  Only 100 of the semifinalists are from California.

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Nearby Huntington Beach also had a semifinalist; a student named Amber Gibson who attends Edison High School.

About 80 percent of the semifinalists are expected to become finalists, and more than half of the finalists will win an Achievement Scholarship.

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To become finalists, semifinalists and their high schools submit detailed scholarship applications, including information about academic records, participation, community activities and educational goals; an essay; earn high SAT scores; and be endorsed by a high school official.

Finalists will be announced in January. More than $2.5 million has been set aside for this year's scholarships. Corporate and business sponsors will underwrite about 100 Achievement Scholarship awards for finalists who meet criteria set by the grantor.

More than 160,000 high school juniors from across the United States entered the scholarship competition when the took the 2012 PSAT.


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