Skip to Main Content

11 Monroe seniors awarded 2024-25 Ohio Governor’s Merit Scholarship

 Back To District News

11 Monroe seniors awarded 2024-25 Ohio Governor’s Merit Scholarship

Nov 8, 2024
Scholarship recipients pose for a photo with members of the board at the Oct. 28, 2024 Monroe Local School District Board Meeting
Second row (from left): Brady Staples, Kaylie McIntosh, Samuel McCausland, Board Member A.J. Fullam, Isabella Muncy, Board Member Tom Leeds, Timothy Hudson, Chloe Glay and Board Vice President Debbie Hagedorn. First row (from left): Board President Tim Carpenter, Matthew Esau, Sophia Sallee, Natalie Long, Rachel Riegel, Brooklynn Baker and Board Member Dave Grant

11 Monroe seniors representing the top 5% of their graduating class have been named recipients of more than $200,000 in financial assistance to attend an Ohio college or university through the Governor’s Merit Scholarship program. 

Monroe seniors Brooklynn Baker, Matthew Esau, Chloe Glay, Timothy Hudson, Natalie Long, Samuel McCausland, Kaylie McIntosh, Isabella Muncy, Rachel Riegel, Sophia Sallee and Brady Staples are eligible to receive the scholarship.

Launched in December 2023, the Governor’s Merit Scholarship program provides up to $5,000 in scholarship funding (renewable up to four years) to seniors graduating in the top 5% of their class in each of Ohio’s public and chartered, nonpublic (private) high schools, as well as homeschooled applicants. Funds may be applied to tuition and fees, books and educational expenses, room and board, and transportation costs and do not need to be paid back.

According to the Ohio Department of Higher Education, 35-40% of Ohio’s highest achieving high school graduates attend college or university in another state each year. On average, 66% of all U.S. college students stay to work in the state from which they graduate.

The GMS program, established by Governor DeWine and the Ohio Legislature, was designed to reduce financial barriers preventing Ohio’s top high school graduates from pursuing higher education, recognize the impressive scholastic achievement of Ohio’s top graduates, and incentivize Ohio’s high achieving students to stay in the state following high school and college graduation.

The number of students eligible for the GMS is determined by the Ohio Department of Higher Education and is based on the number of students enrolled and in the third year of their graduation cohort at the end of the school year.

Copied!
^TOP
close
ModalContent
loading gif