The Arkansas School for Mathematics, Sciences and the Arts celebrated commencement for 106 members of the Class of 2018 on May 26 at Horner Hall in the Hot Springs Convention Center.
This class included nine students from Saline County.
- Four students are from Benton – Samantha Baxley, Alyssa Easterling, Jacob Jackson, and Jack McWilliams.
- Four students are from Bryant – Katie Evans, Gavin Glenn, Serye Kim, and Cameron Rhoden.
- One student is from Lonsdale – Brock Rigsby.
The Class of 2018 earned $15.3 million in scholarship offers as a group and posted an average ACT composite score of 30 as a class. Thirty-four members of the class were eligible for the Governor’s Distinguished Scholarship, while six students were named National Merit Finalists with two receiving National Merit Scholarships.
Other achievements of members of the class included three students named U.S. Presidential Scholarship candidates, nine seniors qualified to compete in the Intel International Science and Engineering Fair, four qualified for the state Senior High School All-Region Band with one also qualifying for the All-State Concert Band and the All-State Jazz Band, and numerous other accolades.
The event also featured remarks from seniors Zane Colvin of Wynne and Louis Lammers III of Blytheville as well as Arkansas first lady Susan Hutchinson.
Lammers shared an ancient proverb which states that a person alone may be overpowered, yet two can defend themselves. However, a cord of three strands is not easily broken. The Class of 2018 had a three-stranded cord that held it together, Lammers said.
“As we consider the end of our days at ASMSA, we can certainly attest that it has taken that three-stranded cord to hold us together and see us through. And because of the strength of our three-stranded cord, we have not been broken,” he said.
The first cord — friendship — was the strongest of the strands, Lammers said. When the students first arrived two years ago, they didn’t know each other. “Today, I would guess most of us would walk through fire for each other,” Lammers said. “Our differences define us and draw us together.”
The second strand was the faculty and staff members who “have carried us through every day, guided our decision-making and prepared us for the next chapter of our lives. We have been blessed to sit in classes with some of the most passionate high school teachers in this state,” he said.
He said that ASMSA teachers are awesome because they pair their phenomenal subject-area knowledge with their compassion for the students. “We have created unbreakable bonds with professors and established lifelong relationships,” Lammers said.
The third strand of the cord was the support of people at home, including friends, neighbors and especially family, Lammers said. Our families “were brave enough to let us go. They saw in us a potential for independence before we ever knew what we were capable of. Our previous teachers and counselors, our grandmas and big brothers, our moms and dads and dogs and cats were all willing to take a risk on us at an early age to make this school a reality for us,” he said.
Colvin spoke about the opportunities ASMSA students are offered they would not have at their previous schools. The opportunity may have presented some unique challenges, but they weren’t enough to keep them down, he said.
“Through all of this, we persevered. And I’m sure we will persevere through more challenges as we move through these next stages of our lives. … But if we keep to the pattern, we will succeed,” he said.
First lady Hutchinson encouraged the graduates to use the education they received at ASMSA and their future education to do good in the world. People can use knowledge for selfish and evil reasons, she said, but choosing good will get a person through life.
Hutchinson said she hoped each of the students had the opportunity to find their voice in the arts — whether it was through music or painting or some other form of arts. As a child in a large, blue-collar family in Atlanta, her mother ensured that Hutchinson learned to play the piano. Lessons cost a $1.
“They sacrificed for that. Blue collar. Bunch of kids. They worked hard. Mom made sure my dad doled out a dollar. You understand when I was growing up you didn’t even make $1 an hour,” she said.
Other members of the Class of 2018 listed by county are:
Arkansas: Destiny Brown of DeWitt and Devin Sha of Stuttgart
Benton: Benjamin Allen of Bella Vista
Clark: Tanner Adams of Arkadelphia and Leotis McClure of Arkadelphia
Craighead: Minjeong Seok of Jonesboro
Crawford: Reed McCollum of Van Buren
Crittenden: Kay Muntz of Marion, Kashti Shah of Marion and Ethan Underhill of Marion
Cross: Zane Colvin of Wynne
Drew: Joseph Hurley of Monticello
Faulkner: Elijah Felling of Greenbrier, Jarrell Imamura of Conway, Jessica Nunn of Conway, Clementine Payne-Weeks of Greenbrier, Gigi Powell of Conway and Sanidhya Tripathi of Conway
Franklin: Tylo Gardner of Ozark, Hollie Hagler of Ozark, Josiah Humphrey of Ozark and Lauren Kessler of Ozark
Fulton: Bailey Walsh of Mammoth Spring
Garland: Gaige Ehrenworth of Royal, Joshua Lay of Royal, Riddhi Modi of Hot Springs, Andrew Pequignot of Hot Springs, Ethan Shields of Hot Springs, Elizabeth Solleder of Hot Springs and Nate Williams of Royal
Hempstead: Jenna Means of Hope and Branson Smith of Hope
Hot Spring: Isaias Filipek of Bismarck, Ryan Fulbright of Malvern, Kenzie Glass of Bismarck, Kristie Glass of Bismarck, Kavi Modi of Malvern, Pooja Modi of Malvern and Austin Ray of Malvern
Independence: Abigail Richards of Batesville and Laura Wehrung of Batesville
Johnson: Isabella Bolling-Weaver of Clarksville and Joseph Schuster of Clarksville
Lee: Taylor Robinson of Marianna
Lincoln: Autumn Bates of Star City and McKenzie Lewis of Star City
Logan: Dwight Littleton of Magazine and Sarah Vue of Scranton
Marion: Abigail Vance of Pyatt
Miller: Sara Davis of Fouke, Lily Ann Easley of Garland City, Cecily Mobley of Fouke and Robert Wilson of Texarkana
Mississippi: Allie Austin of Blytheville, Johnathon Cato of Blytheville, Louis Lammers of Blytheville and Joanne Lee of Gosnell
Phillips: A’yanah Jefferson of West Helena
Polk: Billie Jo Darden of Mena
Pope: Sabrina Jones of Russellville and Corey Whitbey of Dover
Pulaski: Cassidy Alexander of North Little Rock, Elizabeth Atkinson of North Little Rock, Justin Austin of Sherwood, Denver Ellis of Paron, Katlee Freasier of Maumelle, Brad Greenway Jr. of Jacksonville, Savannah James of North Little Rock, Kyarha Meadows-Russell of Little Rock, Te’ya Mitchell of Little Rock, John Ostermueller of Little Rock, Philip Plouch of Little Rock, Rachael Ranney of North Little Rock, Kendall Sanders of Little Rock, Kyle Sadler of Little Rock, Bushra Sardar of Maumelle, Nadia Teske of North Little Rock and Tyler Vangsness of Maumelle
Randolph: Marlie Jo Hardin Hufstedler of Imboden and Kylie Knee of Pocahontas
Searcy: Christopher Jaeger of Leslie and Nick Jaeger of Leslie
Sebastian: Austin Brigham of Huntington, Laken Deal of Huntington and Sabah Ismail of Fort Smith
Sevier: Noah Sherry of De Queen
Sharp: Sam Kalajyan of Cherokee Village
Union: Vyom Modi of El Dorado and Connor Osborn of El Dorado
Van Buren: Nikki Pastor of Clinton
Washington: Raven Edens of Winslow and Akarsh Kumar of Fayetteville
Woodruff: Camilia Nauden of Augusta
About ASMSA: The Arkansas School for Mathematics, Sciences and the Arts is one of 16 public residential high schools in the country specializing in the education of academically gifted juniors and seniors. Located in historic downtown Hot Springs, the school is a campus of the University of Arkansas System. For more information about Arkansas School for Mathematics, Sciences and the Arts, visitwww.asmsa.org or call 1-800-345-2767.