NASSP, parent organization of the National Honor Society, is proud to announce the winners of the 2022 National Honor Society Scholarships!

Every state in the U.S. is represented among the winners, along with the District of Columbia and our overseas chapters. These students, all members of the class of 2022, were chosen from among thousands of applicants.

Quick Links: National Winner | Pillar Winners | Finalists | Semi-Finalists


National Winner | $25,000

Evan Osgood

Evan Osgood
Loveland High School
Loveland, OH

During the pandemic, Evan Osgood’s twin passions for technology and helping others inspired him to start not just one nonprofit but two. After teaching himself how to make masks in accordance with CDC guidelines, Evan established SOSforPPE, a nonprofit through which he makes and ships PPE assembly kits to those interested in making masks. In addition to filling a need for protective equipment, he has also sought to address COVID learning gaps in STEM subjects. That’s why he started STEMsForYouth, a nonprofit committed to improving access to STEM and narrowing the digital divide. Evan has met with senators, representatives, and government officials to discuss increasing access to STEM education. But he has done more than just talk. He has also taught students from low-income families the computer programming skills and engineering concepts they need to build their knowledge of STEM subjects.


NHS Pillar Winners | $10,625

Pooja Muthuraj

SCHOLARSHIP
Pooja Muthuraj
Maggie L. Walker Governor’s School
Richmond, VA

When Pooja Muthuraj learned about how some girls lack access to menstrual hygiene products, she established a local chapter of PERIOD, an international organization dedicated to ending period poverty and stigma around the world. Through this organization, Pooja and other students lobbied for two statewide bills mandating that public schools provide free period products in their restrooms, and both bills passed in March 2020. Pooja also co-founded her own nonprofit, Teen Polytx, which seeks to bridge divides between high school students from different sides of the political aisle by fostering communication and encouraging conversations about pressing societal issues. Through this group, she moderates monthly discussions open to high school students from across the state, and the organization has connected over 60 high school students through meaningful discourse.

Ethan Sandoval

CHARACTER
Ethan Sandoval
La Salle High School
Pasadena, CA

Ethan Sandoval lives and breathes one NHS pillar in particular: character. A few years before he earned a Presidential Merit Scholarship to attend La Salle High School, a private high school in Pasadena, CA, he was diagnosed with T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia and endured almost four years of life-saving treatments, which left him with a permanent physical disability of foot drop. For two years, he has served as an officer of the Key Club. He was inspired to join because of the club’s fundraising work for a cause that’s close to his heart: the Pediatric Trauma Program. This year, he was nominated to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society’s Students of the Year Program. Ethan has channeled his resiliency and strong character into taking advantage of academic opportunities available to him. For example, through community college courses and Stanford University’s Summer Session, he has learned five different programming languages, and he plans to study computer science in college. Ethan is also the co-captain of his school’s Robotics Club, a Patrol Leader in Boy Scouts, and the founder of his school’s American Red Cross Club.

Alyssa Spellman

SERVICE
Alyssa Speelman
St. Labre Indian Catholic High School
Ashland, MT

Alyssa Speelman dedicates much of her time to serving others in her community. She volunteers to help the elderly and fundraise for charities, and she serves as the captain of her school’s volleyball team. Through her work with Braves Ink, a student-run organization that creates clothing items for local schools, towns, and sports, Alyssa, along with her Braves Ink classmates, led efforts to design a shirt that brings awareness to the epidemic of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW), with all proceeds donated to assist victims’ families. One project especially close to her heart is the making of casket covers. As COVID-19 took many lives in her community, Alyssa made these covers for grieving families to place them on the caskets of their loved ones. Each cover is designed to reflect the deceased’s personality, including artwork of things they loved or their Native names, and to honor their life and help their families heal.

Owen Zhang

LEADERSHIP
Owen Zhang
Bellaire High School
Bellaire, TX

When Owen Zhang was five years old, he lived through the 2009 Urumqi riots in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China. After coming to the United States, he drew from his experience witnessing discrimination and human rights violations to create a nonprofit, Project Lights, Camera, Action, which promotes educational opportunities for Uyghur children and raises awareness about their plight. So far, the organization has donated $9,000 and more than 90 cameras to help Uyghur children document their struggles for the world to see. Owen’s activism does not stop there; he spends much of his time advocating for other causes he is passionate about. He founded a second organization, iEngage, to inspire social responsibility in young people through camps focusing on project-based learning and volunteering.


Finalists | $5,625

Zion Alexander

Queen Balina

Ethan Chiu

Evanna Dominic

Lia Haile

Caroline Holtman

Evan Hsiang

Addie Jones

Paridhi Latawa

Norah Laughter

Kayla McFail

Kaci Mundorf

Swetha Pendela

Celie Rayburn

Hannah Shin

Olivia Turman

Emma Ventresca

Stephanie Wang

Avia Weber

Jaxon Wicks


Semi-Finalists | $3,200