La Lumiere School Celebrates Students Awarded with Academic Honors from College Board National Recognition Programs

Students at La Lumiere earned academic honors from the College Board National Recognition Programs. These programs celebrate students’ hard work in high school and showcase their strong academic performance. The academic honors for rural area, Black, Indigenous, and/or Latino students are an opportunity for students to share their strong academic achievements with colleges and scholarship programs that are seeking to recruit diverse talent.

At La Lumiere, five students received the academic honor: Max Albano (La Porte, IN), Keyan Baghelai (Stevensville, MI), Riona Funderburg (Chesterton, IN), Emmy Jaracz (La Porte, IN), and Miya Simmons (Michigan City, IN).

The criteria for eligible students include:

  • GPA of 3.5 or higher.

  • PSAT/NMSQT or PSAT 10 assessment scores that are within the top 10% of assessment takers in each state for each award program or earned a score of 3 or higher on 2 or more AP Exams in 9th and 10th grade.

  • Attend school in a rural area or small town, or identify as African American/Black, Hispanic American/Latino, or Indigenous/Native.

Eligible students are invited to apply on BigFuture during their sophomore or junior year and are awarded at the start of the next school year in time to share their achievements in high school as they plan for the future. 

“It’s becoming increasingly hard for students to be ‘seen’ during the college recruitment process. We’re exceptionally proud of the National Recognition Programs for celebrating students who are at times overlooked but have shown their outstanding academic abilities,” said Tarlin Ray, senior vice president of BigFuture at College Board. “This is a benefit not only for students but also for colleges and universities committed to recruiting diverse and talented students.”

Pictured (left to right): Miya Simmons, Keyan Baghelai, Max Albano, Emmy Jaracz; Not pictured: Riona Funderburg



Megan Gausselin