Every year, the roughly 7,600 applicants who are named National Merit Scholarship recipients will have waited about two years to see whether they would be chosen. It’s a long process begun annually by about 1.6 million contenders looking for the answer to a simple question: How do you become a National Merit Scholar?
Becoming a National Merit Scholar is simple: Display rare academic excellence while compiling a record of social and civic accomplishments that will inspire whoever writes your letter of recommendation and enable you to make your application essay shine.
National Merit Scholarships comprise three monetary awards presented to students every year in a process overseen by the National Merit Scholarship Corp. Here are some defining numbers from the National Merit Scholarship Program process for 2021:
The cutoff PSAT scores by state for 2022 were announced in September 2021, and students who made the cut learned in September whether they had achieved commendation or semifinalist status.
There are three requirements for entering the National Merit Scholarship Program:
Scholarships for finalists fall into three categories:
These scholarships are worth $2,500 and are only good for one year. They are available to all winners.
These scholarships are a winners who:
Unlike the National Merit Scholarship, some Corporate-Sponsored Merit Scholarships are worth $2,500 + additional stipends and can be renewable. The exact amount for these scholarships will depend on the sponsoring company.
These are four-year renewable scholarships for the winner’s chosen college, as long as the college participates in the program. The sponsoring college chooses the winners of $2,500 scholarships and may provide additional stipends.
Approximately 1,100 National Merit Program participants, who are outstanding but not Finalists, are awarded special scholarships provided by corporations and business organizations.
In the National Merit Scholarship Corp.’s own words: “To participate in the National Merit Program, students must take the PSAT/NMSQT in the specified year of their high school program. Because a student can participate (and be considered for a scholarship) in only one specific competition year, the year in which the student takes the PSAT/NMSQT to enter the competition is very important.”
Acing the PSAT/NMSQT bodes well for your encounter with the SAT and your admissions and scholarship hunts.
Fortunately, PSAT test prep advice is an internet genre. Consider strategies presented by PrepScholar, CollegeXpress, and College Board.
Helpful blogs and practice tests are among the online offerings.
Typically, to advance to Merit Scholarship finalist status, applicants must submit an SAT score that confirms the reported performance on the PSAT/NMSQT. However, the National Merit Scholarship Corporation waived this requirement for 2021:
“Due to the global pandemic and the resulting lack of available test administrations, SAT and ACT scores will not be required or considered for Finalist standing in the 2021 National Merit Scholarship Program.”
This testing update was a response to the ongoing health crisis, and it is not anticipated to become a permanent program change. All other steps to become a National Merit Finalist remained in place. At this time, it is unclear if the testing requirement will be waived for 2022.
If you have scholarship or enrollment questions, the USF Office of Admissions is always ready with answers. You can contact us online or by phone at 813-974-3350.