The candidates that have met the qualifications for the All Bahamas Merit Scholarship (ABMS) are waiting with bated breath to see who will be awarded the prestigious $140,000 scholarship.
Among the graduated high school seniors that qualified to be able to make application were 22 candidates - 12 males and 11 females. They have gone through the interview process by the All ABMS Committee, with each deserving student now having the opportunity to be awarded the $35,000 per year in scholarship money intended for undergraduate studies, tenable at accredited international colleges and universities.
The ABMS is the most prestigious national scholarship to be awarded to a single Bahamian candidate.
Ministry of Education officials in the Scholarship and Educational Loan Division, has said there is "diversity" in the candidate pool with applicant cumulative grade point averages (GPA) ranging between 3.70 and 4.19, and Scholastic Assessment Test (SAT) scores ranging between 1,220 to 1,360.
"The competition is extremely fierce," said officials after they interviewed the candidates.
The candidate who will be awarded the 2023 ABMS will also be exceptionally well rounded and have applied to or been accepted to an academically prestigious international college or university.
Candidates making the 2023 cut come from three islands - New Providence, Grand Bahama and from Eleuthera.
Participating schools include Bishop Michael Eldon School, Queen's College, St. Augustine's College, St. John's College, Sunland Baptist Academy, St. Anne's School, and Central Eleuthera High School. The Central Eleuthera High School students is the only public-school candidate.
Candidates are in a holding pattern, as they await the BGCSE (Bahamas General Certificate of Secondary Education) examinations national results which will play an integral role in who will be the named the country's 29th All Bahamas Merit Scholarship recipient in 28 years.
"There is ardent competition among the candidates and it is possible that more than one student may be granted the ABM award in a particular year," said officials.
This is the exception rather than the rule, but came to be in 2019, when two ABMS were named for the first time in the award's history in Mahlia Neely, a 2019 Queen's College graduate, and Dehron Smith, a 2017 Nassau Christian Schools (NCS) graduate.
Neely and Smith were the 24th scholars to receive the ABMS award after its 1993 introduction.
Smith was a 2017 Nassau Christian Schools (NCS) graduate who received the award two years after graduating high school. He was the first NCS student to be awarded the ABMS.
Bahamian high school graduates may still be eligible for the scholarship if they continue in any high school extension program (approved by the committee) for a maximum of two years after graduating from an approved Bahamian high school. These students must apply during the second year of their studies. Candidates must have a cumulative GPA of 3.7 and above, a minimum of eight BGCSEs with at least eight A passes, SAT score of 1,220 or higher or an ACT (American College Test) score of 25 or higher.
Smith was a United World College (UWC) Hong Kong scholarship recipient. He was eligible to receive the ABMS in 2019, two years after graduating high school and after completing the UWC program which is considered an extension of a high school program. Applicants for the ABMS and National Merit Scholarships (NMS) can apply once the two UWC years are completed.
The ABMS is the highest level of merit scholarship awarded by the government. It is valued at $35,000 per annum for up to five years depending on the degree pursued and is valued between $140,000 over four years; or $175,000 over five years dependent on the degree program, and tenable at accredited universities locally or abroad.
NMS is the second highest level of merit scholarship awarded by the government, and can be awarded to multiple Bahamian applicants.
The scholarship has a maximum value of $25,000 per year for up to four years and is tenable at accredited universities locally or abroad.
To be considered for the ABMS award, applicants must have a GPA of 3.7 and above, a minimum of eight BGCSE's with at least eight A passes, have applied to or been accepted to an academically prestigious accredited college or university, have an SAT score of 1,220 and above, demonstrate excellence in co-curricular activities, possesses an unwavering dedication to improving the lives of Bahamians and demonstrate a strong moral character and the potential to lead.
To be considered for the NMS, applicants must have a GPA of 3.5 and above, achieve an SAT score of 1,220 or higher, possess a minimum of seven BGCSE A passes and have applied or been accepted to an academically prestigious accredited college or university.
The ABMS is a collaboration between the Central Bank of The Bahamas and the Ministry of Education.
All Bahamas Merit Scholars
2022 - Alexis Godet, University of South Florida, chemical engineering and music performance, classical violin
2021 - Maya Tilberg, University of Miami, biology
2020 - No award given
2019 - Mahila Neely, Vassar
College, English and Dehron Smith, Ithaca College, athletic training
2018 - Aaron Edgecombe, University of Miami, electrical engineering
2017 - Paloma Cartiwrtight, McGill University, engineering/computer science
2016 - Simone, Cambridge, McGill University, art history and urban studies
2015 - Domonic McDonald, University of Western Ontario, Canada, political science with a specialty in international relations
2014 - Gabrielle Moss, Johns Hopkins University, mathematics and statistics with a focus on actuarial science
2013 - Shannon Butler, University of St. Andrew's, medicine
2012 -Theophilus Moss, Johns Hopkins University, mechanical engineering
2011 - Jamia Moss, College of St. Benedict, biochemistry and Spanish
2009 - Jenna Chaplin, University of The Pacific, fine arts and psychology
2008 - Genymphas Higgs, Drexel University, biomedical engineering
2007 - Lisa Rodgers, Brown University, education
2006 - Kyle Chea, Vassar College, pre-med and foreign languages
2005 - Andrea Culmer, McGill University, Chemistry and Pre-Med
2004 - Sharelle Ferguson, Harvard University, social studies
2003 - Sebastian Hutchinson, University of Pennsylvania, finance and accounting
2002 - Peter Blair, Duke University, physics and mathematics
2001 - No award given
2000 - Ricardo Davis, Queen's University, Ontario, biochemistry
1999 - Ryan Knowles, Boston University, accounting and finance
1998 - Damian Archer, University of Western Ontario, University of the West Indies, Mona Campus – 1 year, chemistry, medicine
1997 - Jehan Unwala, Tufts University, international relations and economics
1996 - Rhys Powell, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, electrical engineering and computer science
1995 - Damian Forbes, Yale University, economics
1994 - No award given
1993 - Shireen Denise Donaldson, Johns Hopkins University, biochemistry
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