Houston’s Graduating Seniors Get Smarter

The 2024-2025 National Merit Scholarship Competition is looking to be a good year for Houston-area high school seniors. There are 582 seniors who scored in the top 1% on the PSAT to earn the celebrated “Semifinalist” designation and will go on to compete for the National Merit Scholarship. This year’s impressive number of Semifinalists represents a 20% increase over last year’s 466 Semifinalists and is about 3.4% of all Semifinalists in the nation. Houston’s best high schools for the Academic Top 1% are St. John’s, Carnegie Vanguard, and Kinkaid.

The year-long road to being named a National Merit Semifinalist starts in mid-October of the previous year (current juniors will start the process when they take the PSAT this October). While essentially the same test, PSAT participation is nearly one-third lower than that for the SAT—approximately 1.4 million students took the PSAT in October 2023 versus 1.9 million students in the class of 2023 who took the SAT. While the state of Texas pays for all students to take either the ACT or SAT, it does not cover the cost of the PSAT.

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Click here to go straight to the names of the Semifinalists!

Cutoff Scores for Texas National Merit Semifinalists and Commended Scholars 

A National Merit Semifinalist (NMSF) is a student who scored in the top 1% of high school juniors on the PSAT in their state (October of 2023 for this year’s winners). This year’s PSAT scores are the first from the new Digital PSAT. The Digital PSAT and Digital SAT format and computer-adaptive style are exactly the same outside of small variations in question difficulty.

Texas is among the 10 most competitive states in the US to qualify as a National Merit Semifinalist. The cutoff score in Texas was a 219 for the 2024-2025 National Merit Scholarship competition, which is unchanged from the last two years. This cutoff score means that students had to have a selection index score of at least a 219 out of 228, which is roughly equivalent to a 1460 on the full SAT.

To earn the less prestigious but still admirable “Commended” designation, students must have earned a selection index score of 208 (up from 207 last year) or roughly a 1390 on the SAT, which places them approximately in the top 5% of PSAT takers nationwide.

The number and percentage of awardees is one of the only statistics that is cross-comparable between private and public high schools. Since the national average is just 1%, any school that boasts more than 1% of their senior class as National Merit Semifinalists is graduating smarter students than average.

Houston’s Top High Schools by National Merit Semifinalists

St. John’s School in River Oaks continues to be the metro area’s talent magnet. With 32 Semifinalists, 19 percent of the senior class qualified as being in the top 1% or 19x the national average. This year was a good year for St. John’s,

Houston ISD’s (HISD) Carnegie Vanguard High School retains its spot ahead of any other public school in the Houston metro area. Their 16 Semifinalists represent about 9% of the senior class, which is about twice as impressive as their district rivals at DeBakey and HSPVA.

Kinkaid School maintains its place among the city’s top three most academically rigorous schools. The storied private school celebrated 13 Semifinalists or 9% of their senior class.

With between 5 and 6% of their classes named as Semifinalists, private schools Strake Jesuit and Awty International essentially tied the well-regarded public schools of Clements (Sugarland) and Bellaire (Houston) to round out the top 6 Houston area schools.

Other big sources of talent can be found in public and private schools like St. Agnes, John Cooper, DeBakey, HSPVA, Woodlands College Park, Seven LakesDullesMemorial, and Clear Lake, where between 3 and 4 percent of their senior classes scored in the top 1% on the PSAT.

Great Suburban Schools in Katy, Sugar Land, and The Woodlands

Only 226 of the Houston-area’s 582 National Merit Semifinalists actually hail from Houston (or Bellaire); the remaining 356 and the majority are from the city’s suburbs, particularly Katy, Sugarland, and The Woodlands.

  • Katy’s 87 National Merit Semifinalists represent 15% of the Houston area’s total.
  • Sugar Land’s 74 National Merit Semifinalists represent 13% of the Houston area’s total.
  • The Woodland’s 51 National Merit Semifinalists represent 9% of The Houston area’s total.

At the statewide level, public boarding school Texas Academy for Math and Science (TAMS), 23 seniors were National Merit Semifinalists—about 15% of the class.

Key Takeaways From the 2024-2025 Semifinalists Announcement

  1. St. John’s School is in a league of its own; the private school attracts and educates the most top performers.
  2. Houston ISD’s Carnegie Vanguard is the best public school in the greater Houston area.
  3. The Katy, Sugarland, and The Woodlands suburban public school districts are exceptional.

National Merit Scholarships Can Mean Free College

In a typical year, about half of all high school juniors across more than 20,000 US high schools participate in the National Merit Scholarship competition beginning the fall of their 11th grade year. Juniors compete by sitting for what is essentially an abbreviated, practice SAT (PSAT).

Semifinalists, the most important designation, represent the top 1% of the approximate 1.3 million test-takers. National Merit Semifinalists generally qualify for scholarships that can range from full tuition at certain public colleges to $5,000 and $10,000 scholarships at prestigious, private universities.

Texas colleges offering full-rides include the University of Houston, UT Arlington, UT Dallas, UT Tyler, UNT Dallas, Abilene Christian, and Lubbock Christian. Even competitive Texas A&M at College Station offers a near free ride.

Approximately 15,000 out of 16,000 semifinalists then go on to be designated finalists. Finalists are typically chosen in accordance with their school grades and ACT or SAT test scores.

​Lastly, a little over half of the finalists are designated “Merit-Scholarship” recipients, meaning that they get the fancy title and one-time $2,500 cash payment. Scholarship winners are selected “based on their abilities, skills, and accomplishments.”

These NMSF figures are particularly attractive, versus SAT and ACT scores, because they’re publicly available from the National Merit Scholarship Corporation; conversely, schools do not have to disclose the SAT and ACT scores of their students. And when private schools do disclose SAT/ACT scores, it’s often presented in a way that’s difficult to read and/or compare.

Names of Houston’s National Merit Semifinalists

This list includes students from schools in Baytown, Bellaire, Conroe, Cypress, Friendswood, Fulshear, Houston, Humble, Katy, Kingwood, Klein, League City, Missouri City, Pearland, Richmond, Spring, Stafford, Sugar Land, The Woodlands, Tomball, and the Texas Academy for Math and Science at Denton. The table’s default sorting is by school.

This article was last updated on September 12, 2024

Download the full list of Texas National Merit Semifinalists from National Merit Scholarship Corporation (via Reddit)

Author

  • Stephen Hayes

    Stephen Hayes is General Academic's Vice President. Stephen created the curriculum for our ISEE, SAT, PSAT, and ACT services, and he is always happy to talk shop about any of your academic needs. Stephen loves to travel abroad, especially if it’s to Iceland! He graduated from Houston Baptist University with a BA in English in 2010, and he has been a Texan since age 4.

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