More than two dozen outstanding high school chemistry students from across the region participated in the recent MTSU Department of Chemistry Scholarship Tournament.
Held in the Science Building, the competition recognized nearly 30 outstanding chemistry students from Rutherford and surrounding counties while giving them an up-close look to consider MTSU as their college choice. Participants included seniors who had completed a year of chemistry and qualified juniors.
Incentives included special awards (scholarships to attend MTSU and cash) to the top three senior finishers and top junior from the approximately 90-minute exam “based on general chemistry that a high school student would have covered,” said professor Norma Dunlap, who directed the event.
Central Magnet School student Chandler Shipp earned the first-place award — $2,000 scholarship and $500 cash prize — for taking top overall honors.
Sydney Coil of Independence High School in Franklin, Tennessee, captured second place, which carried a $1,500 scholarship and $300 cash prize.
Independence’s Lauren Caldwell placed third — a $1,000 scholarship and $100 cash prize — in the annual event.
The chemistry department scholarships are contingent upon the recipients applying, being accepted and enrolling in classes for the fall 2020 semester, Dunlap said.
The students toured the 250,000-square-foot Science Building (including state-of-the-art research labs and collaborative learning spaces) that opened in 2014 and learned about the program from current students Grace Millican, Jared Frazier, Isabella Barnett and Josh Couch.
Millican and Frazier are sophomores and University Honors College Buchanan Fellows, the highest scholarship awarded to an MTSU student. A Millington, Tennessee, native, Millican is a double major in biochemistry and Honors organizational chemistry. Frazier is from Spring Hill, Tennessee, and a double major in chemistry and computer science.
Barnett is an Honors student majoring in forensic science. Couch is a senior transfer from Cleveland State Community College.
MTSU has more than 300 combined undergraduate and graduate programs. Chemistry is one of 11 College of Basic and Applied Sciences departments.
— Randy Weiler (Randy.Weiler@mtsu.edu)
Photo: Central Magnet School senior Chandler Shipp, right, was presented a $2,000 chemistry scholarship and $500 cash prize by department Chair Greg Van Patten for taking first-place honors in the annual Chemistry Scholarship Tournament held in the Science Building. (Submitted photo)