…aka “the counselor’s newsletter”…updated weekly with the most recent copy available at www.houstonchristian.org under Counseling & College Guidance. 2015-2016 HC School Code: 443-409 June 3, 2016 Students will be mailed a final report card and list of courses they were approved to take in 2016-17 (by the second week of June). Please order books according to your approved course list. Many students picked up a copy of their 2016-17 courses during final exam week. SENIORS – Ms. Pearson wants to remind you to drop off a senior picture in the counseling office. AND, pick up your diploma. Thank you. Testing Info SAT/ACT DATES ’15-‘16 SAT Dates June 4, 2016 ACT Dates June 11, 2016 The best time for HC kids to take an SAT or ACT test prep course th is the summer after 10 grade…this will help you be prepared for th the PSAT in October of 11 grade and also for the first SAT (and th ACT) that you take in December of 11 grade….it is right around the corner and you need to plan ahead. MOST HC kids are too busy in the school year to take a prep course during school because they have homework and sports that make it impossible. Kaplan Summer Test Prep Sessions Two different sessions available. Online registration NOW AVAILABLE: http://www.kaplanatschool.com/kas.aspx or call 1-800-KAP-TEST Summer Session 1 – no Friday classes Practice Test Session 1 Session 2 Session 3 Session 4 Practice Test Session 5 Session 6 Monday 6/6/16 3:00pm – 6:15pm Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Monday Tuesday 6/7/16 6/8/16 6/9/16 6/13/16 6/14/16 3:00pm – 6:00pm 3:00pm – 6:00pm 3:00pm – 6:00pm 3:00pm – 6:00pm 3:00pm – 6:00pm Wednesday Thursday 6/15/16 6/16/16 3:00pm – 7:00pm 3:00pm – 6:00pm Summer Session 2 – no Friday classes Practice Test Session 1 Session 2 Session 3 Session 4 Practice Test Session 5 Session 6 Monday 8/1/16 3:00pm – 6:15pm Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Monday Tuesday 8/2/16 8/3/16 8/4/16 8/8/16 8/9/16 3:00pm – 6:00pm 3:00pm – 6:00pm 3:00pm – 6:00pm 3:00pm – 6:00pm 3:00pm – 6:15pm Wednesday Thursday 8/10/16 8/11/16 3:00pm – 6:00pm 3:00pm – 6:00pm KAPLAN FREE ON DEMAND TEST PREP - For students wanting to explore test prep over the summer, Kaplan is offering FREE Online PSAT, SAT and ACT PRACTICE TESTS and WORKSHOPS. Visit www.kaptest.com/hsevents to see what is available! st th Class of 2018, rising Juniors: should register to take the 1 SAT and ACT in December of 11 grade… so you will have a nd benchmark to know if one test score is better than the other…then you can take a 2 testing of the strongest test. Always take the writing option, every time since many schools require the writing option in order to accept the scores (UT and TAMU specifically). Please take both tests as early as possible even if you have not done any test prep. ALL colleges take either test. HC always recommends that you send your scores to 4 colleges every time you take the test. If you score nd rd higher on a 2 or 3 testing the colleges will ALWAYS take/use your higher score. You get 4 free submissions to colleges with each test registration. If you wait until you receive your scores to send them to a college it will cost $11.25 per college….choose 4 colleges you are likely to apply to at the time you register! Click these links to register for the ACT and SAT: www.sat.collegeboard.org or www.act.org You can get free prep from Khan Academy via Collegeboard.org which will use your PSAT score report to tutor you on questions you missed and areas that appear weak as a result of your scores. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS IN THE SUMMER! A little test preparation goes a long way - especially when it is free! The link below offers great video tutorials that correspond to the different sections on the ACT test. Check it out - you never know what you might learn! http://www.mometrix.com/academy/act-test/ Misc. College & Career Info College Application Essay Information Instructions. The essay demonstrates your ability to write clearly and concisely on a selected topic and helps you distinguish yourself in your own voice. What do you want the readers of your application to know about you apart from courses, grades, and test scores? Choose the option that best helps you answer that question and write an essay of no more than 650 words, using the prompt to inspire and structure your response. (The application won't accept a response shorter than 250 words or more than 650.) NEW UT and TAMU info for rising seniors, c/o 2017! U of Texas Essays ℅ 2017, application will open Aug. 1, 2016 http://admissions.utexas.edu/apply/freshman-admission ● Topic A plus a second essay of the student's choice ● Review applicants will be more 'holistic' & students should find a "relevant way" on application to connect their requested major with something they have been doing (could be community service, extra-curricular, possibly in essay Topics B or C, or something on the resume.) TAMU Info & Essays ℅ 2017, application will open Aug. 1, 2016 http://admissions.tamu.edu/freshman/apply 3 essays required- A, B, & C on Applytexas application (Average length = 1 - 1.5 pages) ● No more than two rec letters will be considered. ● Essays Should be personal and utilized as tools to share your story with the Admissions Committee ● DO NOT USE the new “COALITION APPLICATION”....only use APPLYTEXAS.ORG NEW Essay topics for rising seniors, c/o 2017! ApplyTexas Essay Prompts for class of 2017 are NEW!... Juniors--WRITE ALL REQUIRED ESSAYS IN JUNE AND JULY----DO NOT WAIT FOR SCHOOL TO BEGIN. HC counselors will review them for you in August when you return to school! ApplyTexas Essay Prompts For Freshman Applications, entering fall 2017: Essay A: What was the environment in which you were raised? Describe your family, home, neighborhood, or community, and explain how it has shaped you as a person. Essay B: Some students have an identity, an interest, or a talent that defines them in an essential way. If you are one of these students, then tell us about yourself. Essay C: You’ve got a ticket in your hand – Where will you go? What will you do? What will happen when you get there? Topic D: Personal interaction with objects, images and spaces can be so powerful as to change the way one thinks about particular issues or topics. For your intended area of study (architecture, art history, design, studio art, visual art studies/art education), describe an experience where instruction in that area or your personal interaction with an object, image or space effected this type of change in your thinking. What did you do to act upon your new thinking and what have you done to prepare yourself for further study in this area? Topic S: There may be personal information that you want considered as part of your admissions application. Write an essay describing that information. You might include exceptional hardships, challenges, or opportunities that have shaped or impacted your abilities or academic credentials, personal responsibilities, exceptional achievements or talents, educational goals, or ways in which you might contribute to an institution committed to creating a diverse learning environment. Common Application essay topics for 2016-2017 (class of 2017): Personal statement essay prompts will stay the same. Juniors can create a CA account now & it will roll over to 2016-2017 in the summer. Choose one: 1. Some students have a background, identity, interest, or talent that is so meaningful they believe their application would be incomplete without it. If this sounds like you, then please share your story. 2. The lessons we take from failure can be fundamental to later success. Recount an incident or time when you experienced failure. How did it affect you, and what did you learn from the experience? 3. Reflect on a time when you challenged a belief or idea. What prompted you to act? Would you make the same decision again? 4. Describe a problem you've solved or a problem you'd like to solve. It can be an intellectual challenge, a research query, ethical dilemma - anything that is of personal importance, no matter the scale. Explain its significance to you and what steps you took or could be taken to identify a solution. 5. Discuss an accomplishment or event, formal or informal that marked your transition from childhood to adulthood within your culture, community, or family. Sophomore, Junior and Senior Athletes: If you intend to pursue athletics in a D1 or D2 college or university, you must register with the NCAA. To register, go to www.eligibilitycenter.org and click New Account in the upper right hand corner. You must request an official HC transcript after your junior year and AGAIN after your senior year. A transcript may ONLY be requested by using the My Planner section of your NCAA account. Contact the Registrar at kklasen@houstonchristian.org with questions. CAP program UT: The University of Texas System developed the Coordinated Admission Program (CAP) to expand the admission options available to students interested in enrolling at The University of Texas at Austin. In general, CAP makes it possible for some freshman applicants to UT Austin to begin their studies at another UT System university. After completing the CAP requirements during their freshman year, such students transfer to UT Austin to complete their undergraduate studies. The following requirements are necessary for successful completion of CAP: Complete a minimum of 30 semester credit hours of transferable coursework from an approved list of courses offered by the UT System school that you choose to attend. Earn a cumulative grade point average of at least 3.2 on the coursework that you complete while enrolled at your selected UT System university. Enroll in and complete at least one mathematics course from the approved list of courses that is beyond Math 301 (College Algebra) during the fall 2015 or spring 2016 semester. Complete all college coursework during the fall 2015 and spring 2016 semesters. Submit a final official transcript to UT Austin by June 1, 2016, from the UT System University that you select to attend. U. of Texas & PACE = A partnership between ACC and UT is Admission to UT through Co-Enrollment at Austin Community College (PACE) Students cannot apply to participate in PACE. UT Austin offers participation to selected freshman applicants who applied to UT but were not granted admission. Longhorns from day one, students in the Path to Admission through Co-Enrollment program take the majority of their classes at Austin Community College, plus one course per semester at The University of Texas at Austin, until they complete ACC’s core curriculum. PACE students have two years to complete the core curriculum and achieve a 2.5 cumulative grade point average. Then they continue their undergraduate studies at UT Austin without reapplying for admission. Those enrolled in PACE have the opportunity to enjoy four years on the Forty Acres, and their coursework is fully applicable toward degree requirements at UT Austin. Students also save about $4,000 in tuition a year by taking their core courses at ACC. Texas A&M again ranked among nation's top animation schools Texas A&M was recognized as one of the nation’s top animation schools, placing third among public institutions and second in the Southwest in new lists created by Animation Career Review, an online career resource for aspiring animators, game designers and digital artists. http://one.arch.tamu.edu/news/2016/4/12/top-animation-schools-us/ Texas A&M policy for “Auto-admit” to students in top Quartile: As long as a “State” university automatically admits the top 10% students, the school can add other auto admit policies as they please. In previous years, TAMU has given automatic admit to students who were in the top Quarter of their class and ALSO had a 1300 SAT (Cr + M with minimum of 600 on each). TAMU has a system of evaluating applicants who attend high schools that do not provide an EXACT numerical rank (like HC, John Cooper, St. John's, etc.). They have a process of assigning a rank to students if they do not have an exact numerical rank from their high school (such as #40 out of 132). Most private schools and many public like Lake Highlands in Dallas do NOT rank. TAMU assigns a numerical rank for the student based upon historical data from the student’s high school. As an example, HC st th students with GPA’s in the 90 or 91 range and in the 1 Quartile according to HC policy could be given a rank of 70 percentile in their th th class, versus 75 percentile. It is certainly possible to be admitted to TAMU if a student is in the 70 percentile range. Keep in mind that courses students choose to take, especially in the senior year, test scores, essays, and resume are very important! Do YOUR personal best…leave the rest to God! The competition at selective schools, like TAMU, continues to grow and every student should have a good back up plan…never plan on just “ONE” college… VISIT campuses before your senior year! Texas A&M University info: If you go to a Community College and transfer into TAMU, you must have a 3.2 (further information here: http://admissions.tamu.edu/PTA ) Texas A&M College of Engineering FALL 2017 Freshman Admission Process – due to the continued increase of competitive applications, the Texas A&M College of Engineering is moving to a total holistic review process beginning August 2016. This new policy applies to engineering, including Texas A&M automatic admits. For more details click on this link Texas A&M Engineering Admissions Process. TAMU 3+2 Bachelor’s/Master’s degree with Bush School of Government & Public Service: The Department of Agricultural Economics at Texas A&M University is offering a new 3+2 program for students who may be interested in pursuing, an Agriculture Economics or Agricultural Business degree with a master’s degree from the Bush School of Government & Public Service. A slide and information details about the new 3+2 program with The Bush School can be found at http://agecon.tamu.edu - select the slide “our students in action”. This program allows a student to obtain a Bachelor’s degree and Master’s degree concurrently and will be available starting Fall 2015. You may call 979-845-4911 with any questions you may have about our new program, or the Agricultural Economics Department. TOP 10% BILL is still in effect– In accordance with Texas Education Code 51.805, all Texas students are automatically admitted to any state university in Texas as first-time freshmen if they: graduate in the top 10 percent of their class from an accredited Texas high school and submit all required credentials/application/fee to the university within published deadlines of the university (for exception to this rule, see U. of Texas-Austin info just above regarding top 8% for c/o 2016 and top 7% for c/o 2017). Upcoming Calendar Events and College Visits PLEASE TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE PROGRAMS IF you are the least bit interested in any of these schools that offer preview days or open houses on their campuses….you CANNOT wait until your junior year to begin attending all the programs that interest you----there won’t be enough time! Vanderbilt Road Show – June 8th or 9th Vanderbilt University is coming to Houston! Don’t miss this opportunity to visit with the admissions staff and learn more about Vanderbilt’s academic opportunities, student life, and affordability through financial aid. To register: http://admissions.vanderbilt.edu/travel/roadshow.php University of Texas: Be a Longhorn: https://mybealonghorn.utexas.edu/my/events Don’t wait – events fill up quickly. AMDA Performing Arts Education offering Bachelor of Fine Arts and Conservatory Programs in the Performing Arts. Interested students should call the AMDA Admissions Department at 800 367-7908. Auditions for Houston are on May 15 and July 24. Are you interested in the Military Academy? An individual who is at least a sophomore in high school can contact West Point Admissions to schedule a date during West Point’s Academic Year to “Shadow” a West Point Cadet for a day. https://candidate.usma.edu/guest/CQ/agree_before_entry.cfm . “Shadowing” is an excellent method for a high school student or a Candidate to “live the life of a Cadet for a day”. An individual “Shadowing” a Cadet does whatever his/her Cadet is scheduled to do that particular day, i.e. going to academic classes, military classes, physical education classes, duties, meal(s) along with visiting the Cadet’s barrack room. Jobs! Summer Information The Muscular Dystrophy Association is looking for five more male camp counselors (Age 16+) for this summer's camp. This is a wonderful experience and a great way to gain service hours for a college resume. Details: June 4-11--Camp for All - fully accessible camp in Burton, TX with ropes course, swimming, horses, state of the art facilities; 168 service hours Contact Dalia DeLeon at https://www.facebook.com/events/984297345023964/?ti=icl Jobs ! BahamaBucks - Katy Freeway Location between Wilcrest and Kirkwood, Owned by a HC grad 2003. Must be 16 years or older. Our hours are from 11to 11 and must be able to work hours between 10 am and midnight. Shifts are usually 5-6 hours long. Pay starts at 7.25 during training and once you graduate from training (2 weeks) you increase to 7.75. After 30 days eligible for level 1 test where pay increases to 8.00 after 60 days of being a level 1 eligible for a level 2 test which increases pay to 8.50 and after 90 days of being a level 2 eligible for level 3 test and pay increases to 9.00. Positions for Assistant management will come along as well. It is a fun environment and we are looking to bring on between 15-20 people for the summer. I have attached a link to our website as well as our fb page and a quick link to employment inquiry. They fill basic info out on there and I pre screen and bring in for interviews with one of my managers. I look forward to getting some great kids from Houston Christian! https://www.facebook.com/BBTX1257/ link to FB OR http://www.bahamabucks.com link to website OR APPLY ONLINE AT http://bahamabucks.com/contact/employment-2 Employment link - make sure they select 11300 Katy freeway as location Jobs! LIFEGUARDS NEEDED – Cypress Creek YMCA. For details: Cypress Creek YMCA LSU PRE-COLLEGE SUMMER PROGRAMS - Early registration discounts available. Register by May 20 and save! Hurry – classes fill up quickly. Click here for more details and to register: http://www.outreach.lsu.edu/ UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS – SUMMER STEM PROGRAM FOR WOMEN: WEatUT, July 23 – 26, 2016 An overnight camp held on the UT Austin campus for rising high school senior women interested in Engineering. The camp is $50 for students. Scholarships available. CREATEatUT, June 20 – 24, 2016 A day camp held on the UT Austin campus for rising high school sophomore and junior women interested in Engineering. The camp is $200 for students. Scholarships available. For more details: https://utexas.box.com/v/wepsummercamps Priority deadline is April 30th with rolling admit after that date. th th th UNIVERSITY OF WASHINGTON (Seattle) Game Experience for students entering 10 , 11 or 12 . Two sessions th th th th available: June 29 to July 17 or July 20 to August 7 . For all the details: http://www.expamerica.net/summer/game/?utm_source=Computer+Science+Teachers&utm_campaign=dacad01ff6Computer_Science3_30_2016&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_ca2a6aee5a-dacad01ff6-227226045 STANFORD UNIVERSITY Summer Programs - https://spcs.stanford.edu/college-counselor MISSOURI UNIVERSITY OF SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Summer Programs – Several opportunities for high school students offering a variety of programs such as Cyber Miner Camp, Eco Girl Camp, Nuclear Engineering Camp, Formula SAE Electric Car, Introduction to Engineering, and Summer Research Academy to name a few. For more details and to register: http://futurestudents.mst.edu/summercamps/ OSU – OPERATION ORANGE SUMMER CAMP – For high school students interested in a career in medicine. Spend a day in the life of a medical student at Operation Orange. For more information click on this link: http://www.houstonchristian.org/uploaded/Counseling/OSU_Operation_Orange_Flier.pdf DREXEL UNIVERSITY – Summer Institutes - Drexel's summer academic programs are open to highly motivated high school students who wish to explore what a university-level program is all about. Workshops are led by Drexel faculty and utilize Drexel's labs, facilities, and the city of Philadelphia's many resources. Students learn in classrooms ranging from a state-of-the-art recording studio to a securities trading lab or a designer boutique to a salt marsh. In other words, this is a different kind of summer vacation. The programs are from one to five weeks. For information: http://drexel.edu/undergrad/summer/ WAKE FOREST SUMMER PROGRAM “LENS” (Learn, Experience, Navigate, Solve) – For rising high school juniors and seniors. Three week residential experience at Wake Forest. Two different programs to apply for: Global Sustainability or Cultural Crossroads. For more information: http://lens.wfu.edu/ AMERICAN UNIVERSITY, Washington, DC – Community of Scholars Pre-College Summer Program through the School of International Service. For high school students interested in studying international relations. Meet other students passionate about creating meaningful change in the world. Earn 3 college credits. For more information visit: www.american.edu/sis/communityofscholars UT Austin Summer Academic Camp: June 25 - July 15, 2016 Special classes in Engineering, Sports Management, Medicine, Psychology, and Fashion 3; Prices ranging from $2,799 $5,499 http://www.summerdiscovery.com/u-texas-austin st ENGINEERING – Learn from UT Engineering faculty. Desing product from concept to market. Based on 1 yr. curriculum. FORENSIC SCIENCE – taught by crime lab scientists. Learn core scientific (bio, chem., and physics) principles used to solve crimes. Analyze and interpret evidence. MEDICINE – Case-based, hands-on instruction from UT Med School faculty and physician. Discover if medicine is for you. PROGRAMMING – Gain experience in key, in-demand languages from seasoned developers. Program a robot and build your own app. SPORTS MEDICINE – Get a jump on sports and exercise medicine from award-winning UT Athletic faculty. Rare high school opportunity. EMERSON COLLEGE (Boston) summer institute for high school students: http://www.emerson.edu/academics/pre-college/pre-college-institutes Communication Disorders Institute: July 10–July 16, 2016, Journalism Institute: July 10–July 30, 2016, Political Communication Institute (PAL): July 17–August 6, 2016 DUKE UNIVERSITY SUMMER SESSION – Accepting applications for your unforgettable summer at Duke University! We invite you to the Duke Summer College for High School Students (grades 10 & 11) to earn academic credit, or Duke Summer Academy for High School Students (grades 9-12) to enroll in personal enrichment classes with a global perspective. Make friends from all over the globe as you learn in a classroom environment that is intimate enough to gain the individual attention you need to thrive. http://summersession.duke.edu/ OXBRIDGE ACADEMIC SUMMER PROGRAMS – Study over the summer in Europe and the United States. Locations such as Cambridge, Barcelona, Paris, New York, Los Angeles, etc. Discover a new culture, learn to live independently and push yourself intellectually. For details visit www.oxbridgeprograms.com or call 1-800-828-8349. PRE-LAW ACADEMY AT STEPHEN F. AUSTIN – July 5-11, 2016. This academy is the only Pre-law summer experience in Texas. The workshop is designed for Juniors and Seniors. The activities include conversations with federal and state judges, visits to courtrooms and law offices, Investigation of a crime scene, mock trial competition, study of the judicial system and more. For cost and more information, visit sfasu.edu/Pre-Law Academy. BOSTON UNIVERSITY – Summer Term High School Programs – several programs to choose from. Visit http://www.bu.edu/summer/high-school-programs/ WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY – St. Louis – High School Summer Scholars Program – Five week program where students live on campus, enroll in courses, and study alongside undergraduates. Two sessions available 6/12-7/16 or 7/17 to 8/19. For details visit: summerexperiences.wustl.edu BROADREACH Summer Science and Adventure Programs – www.gobroadreach.com Examples of college accredited programs – Marine Science, Animal Science, Language & Cultural Immersion, Photography and Arts, Scuba & Sailing. HILLSDALE COLLEGE – High School Summer Study and Travel Programs – Summer 2016 course offerings – The Land & Literature of England, Sir Winston Churchill and World War II, Western Civilization: Visions from Italy, The Roots and History of American Liberty. For more details visit hillsdale.edu/admissions College Scholarship Information SCHOLARSHIPS.COM You find money and colleges find you! Project Joy & Hope 2016 HOPE SCHOLARSHIP – To be eligible for a scholarship, students must have experienced the death of a parent or a sibling. Please stop by the counseling office for more details or click on this link for more details: http://joyandhope.org/?s=scholarship UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS SCHOLARSHIP OPPORTUNITIES: http://scholarships.texasexes.org/ Use Naviance Scholarship Search, or Fastweb www.fastweb.com/college-scholarships for the best search engines. Way to Go HC Kids!! – email your news to hrosandich@houstonchristian.org Matthew Schwartz, HC and DSP c/o 2012, and U. Va graduate 2016, recently wrote an article for a ministry/ organization on campus at UVA. See link below link below as it is an excellent article written on the conflicting thoughts, ideas, questions a college graduate experiences on the next transition. Matt graduate on May 21 and will be going to work for 1 year at the oldest continuously operating boarding school in the world, founded in 597 A.D. by St. Augustine. It is called The Kings School in Canterbury, England. He is going to teach humanities, squash, and lacrosse, and travel the world while he is there! Way to GO MATT! So Awesome, sooooooooo proud of you! Stoetzer Gray, c/o 2016, truly an EXCEPTIONAL Eagle Scout…WOW…if you are 100 years old you won’t know anyone who has achieved this as an Eagle Scout! Houston Eagle Scout Earns ALL 138 Badges on January 26, 2016. Only 270 of the roughly 52 million boys who have been Boy Scouts since BSA was founded in 1910 have achieved this goal. Gray has been a member of Troop 599, sponsored by Memorial Drive United Methodist Church since 2008. WOW and Congrats to Stoetzer! Read the Houston Chronicle Article: http://www.houstonchronicle.com/news/houston-texas/houston/article/Milestone-reached-as-Houston-teenearns-all-138-6786082.php Congratulations to Hayden Reeves, c/o 2016 – Eagle Scout! Congratulations to Ted Napp, c/o 2016 – Eagle Scout! Sydney Huxtable, c/o 2018, touring Texas A&M University. Sydney plans to attend Camp Arch this summer with the College of Architecture. Ryan (c/o 2018) and Maddie (c/o 2019) DeLongchamps visited Washington University and St. Louis University while in St. Louis. Look where our Seniors were accepted! As of 6/3/2016 Students must inform the counseling office in order for names and colleges to be included on this list. A college listed in bold is the college the student will be attending. Fill in the information on the clipboard on Mrs. Rosandich’s desk and show proof of your college acceptance and any scholarship offers. Caroline Angell – Texas Christian University, University of Mississippi, Auburn, University of Oklahoma, Baylor University Gracie Bailliet – Texas A&M University Gentry Barton – University of Mississippi, University of Alabama, Baylor Harrison Barton – Southern Methodist University Daniel Baudin – Baylor University, Texas Tech University, Texas Christian University Kyler Beaton – Texas A&M University, University of Alabama, Louisiana State University, University of Oklahoma, Baylor University Thomas Bennett – Clemson University, Louisiana State University William Black – Oklahoma State University Malik Bradley - U. of Oklahoma Ben Brown - Baylor U. Tre Buggs – Los Angeles School of Film and Recording Isabelle Buie – University of Houston, Houston Baptist U, University of Houston Clear Lake, , Mary Hardin-Baylor U Katie Burgy – University of Tulsa, Abilene C., U, Millsaps College, Oklahoma State U, U of Oklahoma, Texas Christian U Jake Byars – Texas A&M, Texas Tech University, University of Alabama, , University of Oklahoma, Louisiana State University, Colorado School of Mines Emily Calkins – Texas Christian University, Samford University, Santa Clara University Connor Campo – Colorado State University, University of Alabama, University of Colorado at Boulder, University of Maryland Tre Carter – Lamar University David Choi – Texas A&M University, Baylor University, Colorado School of Mines Caitlin Clarke – Wake Forest University Christian Clarke - Colgate U. Athena Co – University of Texas, Texas A&M University, University of Tulsa, Colorado School of Mines, University of Houston Chris Crawford – Southwestern University, Oklahoma State U., Sam Houston State U., , U. of Mississippi, Texas Tech U. Avery Daniels – Oklahoma State University, University of Alabama, University of Mississippi, Texas Tech, Louisiana State University, Texas Tech University, Baylor University Alec DelSota - Southern Methodist U. Alex Deluca – Auburn University, University of Alabama, University of Arizona, Texas Christian University, Vanderbilt University Rebecca Dyer – , Baylor University, University of Texas San Antonio Alex Faure - Abilene Christian U., Baylor U., Samford U., Loyola U-New Orleans Madeline Fordham – U of Alabama, U of Mississippi, U of Oklahoma, Texas A&M U, Baylor U, Southern Methodist U Jessica Fronckiewicz – University of Oklahoma, Auburn, Texas Christian University, Baylor University Katie Furman – Baylor University, Texas State University, Auburn University, Samford University, Texas Christian University Elizabeth Gaddis – Belmont University Remy Garfield – Samford University, Baylor University, Belmont University, University of Oklahoma, Texas Christian University Jadon Gaudin - Oklahoma State U. Marissa Grabowski – University of Texas, Baylor University, University of Missouri, University of Oklahoma, Auburn, University of Mississippi, Alabama, Louisiana State University Stoetzer Gray – United States Military Academy at West Point, Penn State, Ohio State, Texas A&M, U of Tennessee, Purdue, University of Wisconsin (Madison), Krista Green – Cedarville University, Dallas Baptist University, Oklahoma Baptist University Jackson Greene – Texas A&M University, University of Alabama, Baylor University, University of Mississippi, Auburn Nick Gruesen – Texas A&M University at Corpus Christi M.J. Hedgepeth, Jr - U. of Oklahoma Ryland Hennessey - Baylor U. Annalea Hill – Texas Tech University Caroline Hughes – Northwestern University Mary Caroline Johnson – Texas Christian University, University of Arizona, Belmont University, St. Edwards, Tulane, Santa Clara University, University of Texas, Coastal Carolina University Ryan Johnson – Baylor University, University of Houston Emily Kaestner – University of Oregon Claire Karsten – Texas A&M University at Corpus Christi Alexys Kenvin – Texas A&M University (Blinn Team), Tarleton State, Texas A&M at Corpus Christi, Texas State, U of Alabama, University of Sydney, University of Sao Paulo Neil Kerrigan – Samford University, Baylor University, Houston Baptist University Austin Killion - Texas A&M U-Galveston Kolby Killion - U. of Texas Courtney King – Southwestern University, Texas Tech University, Oklahoma State University, University of Mississippi, Stephen F. Austin State University, Sam Houston State University, Univ. of Oklahoma, University of Arkansas, Baylor University, Texas A&M, Louisiana State University, University of North Carolina - Charlotte Kylan Kinkade – University of Texas at Austin, Baylor University, Klayton Koenig - U. of Alabama Braden Kopp – Vanderbilt University Erin Lallinger – Vanderbilt University, Baylor University, Case Western Reserve University, University of Texas at Austin Connor Lehane – University of Texas, University of Oklahoma, , Texas A&M, Southern Methodist University Brett Lehle – Ohio Wesleyan University, Roanoke University, Messiah College, Lynchburg College, High Point University Madeline Markey - U. of Oklahoma Justin McCormack – Southwestern University, Baylor University, University of Memphis, University of South Carolina, Texas A&M University, University of Houston, Texas Christian University, Trinity University, Centenary College Griffin McKee – University of Arizona Matt Metoyer – University of Oklahoma, Texas State University, Ted Napp – University of Texas-Dallas, Savannah College of Arts & Design (SCAD), University of Utah Annabelle Newton - St. Edward’s U. Elizabeth Olinde – Emory University, Louisiana State U., Abilene Christian University, Texas A&M, Baylor University, U. of Georgia, Meredith O’Neal – Samford University, University of Alabama Anisha Parmar – Baylor University, Houston Baptist University Bree Perry – St. Mary’s University Yanran Qian – University of Maryland-College Park, Texas A&M U, U of Massachusetts, Virginia Tech, U of South Carolina, University of Pittsburgh, Purdue University Jayde Qualls – New York University Robert Quinilty – Washington and Lee University, Texas Christian University, Southern Methodist University Michael Raitt - U. of Oklahoma Renee Rapier – Louisiana State University, University of Arizona Michael Raitt – University of Oklahoma Jordan Rapp – United States Naval Academy, Texas A&M University, University of Tulsa, Colorado School of Mines Hayden Reeves – Eckerd College, Nova Southwestern University, Texas State University Blake Remedios – University of Texas at San Antonio, University of Alabama, John Brown University Maria Rios - Baylor U. Justice Robertson – University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma State Univ., Univ. of Mississippi Melissa Rodriguez – Mary Hardin Baylor University Savannah Rucoba – Southern Methodist U., Sam Houston State University, Belmont University David Romero – Texas A&M University, Trinity U, Baylor U, U of Houston, St. Edwards University, St. Mary’s University Ana Ruiz – Texas A&M University, U of Nebraska, Kansas State U, Louisiana State University, Michigan State University Jake Sandoval – University of Arkansas, University of Alabama, University of Mississippi, Texas State University, Baylor University James Scarbrough – Texas Tech University, University of Oklahoma Clay Schlosser – University of Texas, U of Missouri, Clemson U, Indiana University, University of Alabama, University of Miami, University of Wisconsin, University of Michigan, Southern Methodist University, University of Florida, Phillip Schwartz – Texas A&M University, University of Virginia, Wheaton College, Pepperdine University Ji –Young Seo – University of Texas, Texas A&M University, University of California at Irvine Santiago Silva – Baylor University, John Brown University, University of Texas at San Antonio, University of Houston, Pepperdine University, Abilene Christian University Doug Simpson – McNeese State University Lauren Skrobarczyk – Trinity University King Smith – University of Mississippi, University of Alabama, Auburn University William Spaulding – Southwestern University, Abilene Christian University, , Hendrix College, Trinity University, Austin College Trevor Steinbring – Texas A&M University, Trinity University, University of Houston Jonathan Sun – University of Washington, Texas A&M University, University of Texas, Harrison Swiggart – Baylor University, University of Arkansas, Colorado Christian University, The King’s College Alyssa Tabor – University of Texas, Oklahoma State , Louisiana State University, Kansas State University, University of Utah, Baylor University, Texas Christian University, High Point University Hope Tang - Texas A&M U. George Touma - U. of Texas Ahonore Varner – East Carolina University, Lyon College, University of Arizona, University of Alabama Sofia Vazquez – University of Texas, University of Houston, Texas A&M University Carson Wallace – Florida Southern U Marissa Wells – Texas Christian University, St. Edwards U, Texas State U, University of Houston, St. Mary’s College, Theresa Wang Wong - Baylor U. Sarah Zepeda – University of Texas at San Antonio, Baylor U, Southern Methodist U, Texas State U, Houston Baptist U Scholarships Caroline Angell – Baylor University $20,000 over 4 yrs. Gentry Barton – Baylor University $25,000 over 4 yrs. Harrison Barton – Southern Methodist University $259,360 over 4 yrs. Daniel Baudin – Baylor University $56,000, Texas Tech University $12,000 Kyler Beaton – Louisiana State University $13,732 over 4 yrs., University of Oklahoma $12,000 over 4 yrs., Baylor University $56,000 over 4 yrs. William Black – Oklahoma State University $39,000 over 4 yrs. Katie Burgy – Abilene Christian University $56,000 over 4 yrs., Millsaps College $100,000 over 4 yrs., University of Oklahoma $18,000 over 4 yrs., Oklahoma State University $32,000 over 4 yrs., University of Tulsa $96,000 over 4 yrs. Jake Byars – University of Alabama $113,800 over 4 yrs., Texas Tech $14,000 over 4 yrs., LSU $62,000 over 4 yrs., University of Oklahoma $32,000 over 4 yrs., Colorado School of Mines $48,000 over 4 yrs. Connor Campo – Colorado State University $26,000 over 4 yrs. Caitlin Clarke – Wake Forest University $256,000 for 4 yrs. Athena Co – University of Houston $30,000 over 4 yrs., Colorado School of Mines $56,000 over 4 yrs. Chris Crawford – Southwestern University $64,000 over 4 yrs. Avery Daniels – Texas Tech University $12,000 over 4 yrs., Baylor University $44,000 over 4 yrs., University of Mississippi $21,000 over 4 yrs. Alex DeLuca – Arizona $33,000 over 4 yrs. Rebecca Dyer – Baylor University $20,000 over 4 yrs. Madeline Fordham – University of Alabama $69,200 over 4 yrs, Baylor University $64,000 over 4 yrs., Southern Methodist University $60,000 over 4 yrs., University of Oklahoma $24,000 over 4 yrs. Jessica Fronckiewicz – University of Oklahoma $28,000 over 4 yrs., Texas Christian University $60,000 over 4 yrs., Baylor University $64,000 over 4 yrs. Katie Furman – Baylor University $56,000 over 4 yrs. Remy Garfield – Baylor University $56,000 over 4 yrs., Belmont University $16,000 over 4 yrs., Samford University $61,200 over 4 yrs. Marissa Grabowski – Baylor University $56,000 over 4 yrs., University of Oklahoma $12,000 over 4 yrs. Stoetzer Gray - United States Military Academy at West Point $480,000 over 4 yrs. Krista Green – Cedarville University $56,000 over 4 yrs. Jackson Greene – Baylor University $56,000 over 4 yrs., University of Mississippi $28,000 over 4 yrs. Stoetzer Gray – University of Tennessee $60,000 over 4 yrs., Ohio State $57,000 over 4 yrs. Caroline Hughes – Northwestern University $122,000 over 4 yrs. Mary Caroline Johnson – Belmont University $32,000 over 4 yrs., St. Edward’s $80,000 over 4 yrs., University of Arizona $52,000 over 4 yrs., Tulane $100,000 over 4 yrs., Texas Christian University $60,000 over 4 yrs., Coastal Carolina University $16,000 over 4 yrs. Ryan Johnson – Baylor University $56,000 over 4 yrs. Claire Karsten – Texas A&M University at Corpus Christi $87,500 over 4 yrs. Emily Kaestner – University of Oregon $138,700 over 4 yrs. Neil Kerrigan – Baylor University $20,000 over 4 yrs., Houston Baptist University $60,000 over 4 yrs., Samford University $48,000 over 4 yrs. Courtney King – Baylor University $20,000 over 4 yrs., Southwestern University $84,000 over 4 yrs. Kylan Kinkade – Baylor University $56,000 over 4 yrs. Braden Kopp – Vanderbilt University $256,000 over 4 yrs. Erin Lallinger – Baylor University $68,000 over 4 yrs., Case Western Reserve University $25,500 over 4 yrs. Connor Lehane – Southern Methodist University $80,000 over 4 yrs. Brett Lehle – Ohio Wesleyan $80,000 over 4 yrs. Justin McCormack – Southwestern University $108,000 over 4 yrs., Baylor University $64,000 over 4 yrs., University of Memphis $24,000 over 4 yrs., Centenary College $100,000 over 4 yrs., Trinity University $84,000 over 4 yrs., University of South Carolina $77,000 over 4 yrs. Ted Napp – Savannah College of Art and Design $28,000 over 4 yrs., University of Utah $8,000 for 1 yr. Elizabeth Olinde – Louisiana State University $62,000 over 4 yrs., Baylor University $68,000 over 4 yrs., University of Georgia $36,000 over 4 yrs. Anisha Parmar – Baylor University $64,000 over 4 yrs., Houston Baptist University $84,000 over 4 yrs. Bree Perry – St. Mary’s University $55,000 over 4 yrs. Yanran Qian – University of Massachusetts $48,000 over 4 yrs. Robert Quinilty – Southern Texas PGA Scholarship $3,000 to be used at Washington & Lee, $8,000 scholarship from Crum & Forster Insurance Co. via the National Merit Scholarship Corp to be used at Washington & Lee. Washington & Lee University $12,000, Southern Methodist University $120,000 over 4 yrs., Texas Christian University $80,000 over 4 yrs., Jordan Rapp – United States Naval Academy $475,000 over 4 yrs., Colorado School of Mines $56,000 over 4 yrs, University of Tulsa $25,000 over 4 yrs. Hayden Reeves – Eckerd College $84,000 over 4 yrs. David Romero – Texas A&M University $14,000 over 4 yrs. James Scarbrough – Texas Tech University $12,000 over 4 yrs. Clay Schlosser – University of Missouri $40,000 over 4 yrs., Clemson University $40,000 over 4 yrs., Indiana University $40,000 over 4 yrs., Southern Methodist University $80,000 over 4 yrs., University of Florida $80,000 over 4 yrs. Phillip Schwartz – Pepperdine University $120,000 over 4 yrs. W Santiago Silva – John Brown University $35,000 over 4 yrs., Baylor University $44,000 over 4 yrs., Pepperdine University $32,000 over 4 yrs. Doug Simpson – McNeese State University $50,000 over 4 yrs. William Spaulding – Abilene Christian University $44,000 over 4 yrs., Southwestern University $105,768 over 4 yrs., Hendrix College $110,008 over 4 yrs., Trinity University $50,000 over 4 yrs., Austin College $104,000 over 4 yrs. Trevor Steinbring – Trinity University $92,000 over 4 yrs., University of Houston $96,000 over 4 yrs. Harrison Swiggart – University of Oklahoma $64,000 over 4 yrs., The King’s College $48,000 over 4 yrs. Ahonore Varner – Lyon College $58,000 over 4 yrs., East Carolina University $80,000 Carson Wallace – Florida Southern $52,000 over 4 yrs. Marissa Wells – St. Edwards University $60,000 over 4 yrs., St. Mary’s College $72,000 over 4 yrs. Sarah Zepeda – Houston Baptist University $74,000 over 4 yrs. Running Total: $8,041,772