National Merit Scholars From Germantown Announced

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Germantown MD

03 June, 2021

5:05 PM

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GERMANTOWN, MD — The next group of 2021 National Merit Scholarship winners include four high school students from Germantown. The National Merit winners from Germantown are among the more than 3,100 announced nationally this year to receive between $500 and $2,000 scholarships from colleges and universities across the country, the National Merit Scholarship Corp. said in a news release Wednesday. National Merit Scholarship winners from Germantown in 2021 include: Timothy J. Chu, Richard Montgomery High School, University of Maryland, Computer ScienceFelix Gu, Northwest High School, University of Maryland, Computer ScienceHelen Gu, Richard Montgomery High School, University of Maryland, Computer ScienceKetki A. Shah, Seneca Valley High School, University of Maryland, Cell Biology Additional information on the student or students you are highlighting, via a news release or statement from the school district, can go here. The National Merit winners announced this week will have their scholarships funded by the colleges and universities that they will attend. One hundred and sixty colleges and universities — including 85 private and 75 public schools — took part in the merit scholarship program in 2021. An additional group of college-sponsored National Merit scholars will be announced in July, the scholarship corporation said. This group is part of the approximately 7,500 National Merit scholarship winners who will be selected by the end of 2021. National Merit scholarships via corporate-sponsored awards and the corporation's own $2,500 scholarships were announced earlier in the spring. See Similar Stories: National Merit Scholars From Rockville AnnouncedNational Merit Scholars From Silver Spring Announced More than 1.5 million juniors nationally entered the 2021 National Merit scholarship program when they took the 2019 preliminary SAT/National Merit scholarship qualifying test, the corporation said. About 17,000 semifinalists, fewer than 1 percent of the country's high school seniors, were announced last fall. Semifinalists had to write an essay and detail their extracurricular activities, awards and leadership positions to become a finalist. About half of the 16,000 finalists will be merit scholars by the end of the year, the corporation said.

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