Congratulations from 91制片厂
Last week鈥檚 91制片厂 Board of Trustees meeting was a long one for all the right reasons.
That鈥檚 what happens when you honor more than 60 outstanding high school juniors and seniors even before the decision-making starts.
There were 61 91制片厂 student scholars who were honored for being named a National Merit Semifinalist or receiving recognition from the . For the 2020-21 school year, that number was 11.
This year鈥檚 crop came from seven high schools (six traditional plus Arlington Collegiate High School). It included five National Merit Semifinalists and six students who received more than one recognition from the College Board.
Each of the recipients who showed up at the packed board room were lauded by their principal for their work. Each scholar had a chance to thank whoever helped them achieve the honor.
You make Arlington proud
鈥淚t was a great night for our district,鈥 91制片厂 superintendent Dr. Marcelo Cavazos said. 鈥淭hese students have put in hard work throughout their careers, and that work has paid off.鈥
And it helps to start out young in the district. Thirty-seven of the student scholars started in the 91制片厂 in either pre-K or kindergarten. All but one has been in the district for their entire time in high school.
The future is bright for the honorees, too.
The best is yet to come
Arlington Collegiate High School鈥檚 Paola Sanchez Perez, who received National Hispanic Scholar recognition, wants to work in theoretical or applied physics after she鈥檚 done studying at the University of Texas at Arlington. For Camron Stringer, one of four National Merit semifinalists from Martin High School, his path after leaving the University of Texas will take him into physics with a goal of being a lead researcher in a lab. Classmate Heather van Waasbergen, who is also a National Merit semifinalist, sees her future as either a wildlife vet or working in wildlife conservation.
Outside the classroom the recipients do everything from being a drill team member (Monica Rojas, Sam Houston High School, National Hispanic Scholar) to cheerleader (Sabrie Clark, Lamar High School, National Hispanic Scholar and National African American Scholar), and there was even a viola player (Renee Antwi, Sam Houston, National African American Scholar) in the mix.
The honorees all filled out a form asking various questions. One question was about their aspirations after high school or college. Arlington Collegiate鈥檚 Robert Vela, one of the schools鈥 14 Hispanic Scholars, summed it up best.
鈥淪hort and simple I hope to be someone who contributes to society and enjoys all life has to offer,鈥 he said. 鈥淟iving in today鈥檚 society is in no way easy, and life itself can be scary to many of us. But time doesn鈥檛 wait for anyone, and because of that all we can do is our best in whatever obstacles we encounter. My main goal as of now is to repay the kindness my family has shown me.鈥