| February
3, 2005
Preuss School Student Wins Horatio
Alger Award
By Pat JaCoby
Bernice
D. Ramirez, a senior at the Preuss School at the University
of California, San Diego, has been selected as a 2005 Horatio
Alger National Scholar by the Horatio Alger Association of Distinguished
Americans. The award includes a $10,000 college scholarship
and an expense paid trip to Washington D.C. April 6-10 for the
National Scholars conference.
A resident of Barrio
Logan, Ramirez was one of 107 students in the U.S. to be selected
this year from 20,000 high school senior applicants.
“The Horatio
Alger Association is excited to recognize these young people
who have triumphed over incredible challenges in their lives
through hard work, perseverance and integrity,” noted
Dennis R. Washington, president and CEO of the Horatio Alger
Association.
“Examining Bernice’s
achievements, one would hardly know what hardship she has overcome
to attend the Preuss School,” adds Carol Sobek, Preuss
School head counselor. “Many mornings she is the first
student at school, preparing hot chocolate to sell to her classmates
or to help edit our school yearbook during our ‘zero’
period before the rest of the students arrive.”
Ramirez will be the
first of her family to attend college, even to graduate from
high school. Raised by a single parent, she has a younger brother
and an extended family of cousins who live with them.
“I feel really
honored to have been selected,” Ramirez said, “and
hope to use the scholarship for attending a college on the East
Coast.” Requirements for the female honorees at the four-day
conference include wearing business suits and hosiery—“a
first for me,” Ramirez says, and a formal gown made to
her measurements by the Association. While in Washington the
scholars will participate in a series of events that focus on
civic education, goal setting and free enterprise.
Bernice is passionate
about science, math and robotics, Sobek notes, and plans to
major in cognitive science or behavioral neurobiology in college.
She just recently won the grand prize in the Preuss School science
fair; her entry now will go on to the Greater San Diego Science
and Engineering Fair. The exhibit is based on an intern project
Ramirez conducts with Isabel Kaye, Ph.D., a leading researcher
in environmental science, in which she measures the effect of
slope and distance on the regeneration of chaparral in an area
damaged by a major fire.
In addition to her
internship, Ramirez serves as historian for the student government,
writes for the school newspaper, serves as an editor for the
yearbook, and plays after school on the varsity soccer team.
Evenings she either attends the Barrio Logan College Institute,
where she can work on a computer and receive tutoring and mentoring
assistance, or Reality Changers, a college preparatory after
school program focused on religion.
Last year she served
as secretary of the Preuss School Future Educators of America
club and was the club’s ambassador to the national FEA
conference in Dallas, Tex. She also received a scholarship from
Reality Changers to attend the Academic Connections Residential
Program at UCSD last summer; was named an AP Scholar with Distinction
for receiving an average grade of at least 3.5 on all AP exams
taken, and was awarded a Bank of America internship in recognition
of academic achievement and service to the community.
She has volunteered
with the San Diego Park and Recreation Department, the San Diego
Audubon Society, the Natural History Museum Atlas Project, a
Head Start program and the National Science Teachers Association
conference.
Meanwhile, she has
worked on weekends at McDonald’s but this year she’s
been awarded a Bank of America paid internship at a Boys and
Girls Club which, she says, will be a giant step up financially.
Media Contact: Pat
JaCoby, (858) 534-7404
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