Latest Headlines
Greensprings Pupil Makes Johns Hopkins Centre’s World Brightest Students
Uchechukwu Nnaike
The Johns Hopkins Centre for Talented Youth has honoured a secondary school student at Greensprings School, Lagos, Fareedah Oyolola, as one of the brightest students in the world.
The recognition resulted from her exceptional performance in the advanced School and College Ability Test (SCAT), which every student must undergo for the institution to determine their current academic abilities before admitting them into its talent search programme.
“The test was a multiple-choice aptitude test in verbal and quantitative reasoning, and I had to answer 100 questions within 44 minutes! At the end of the test, my score was in the 92nd percentile for verbal reasoning and 87th percentile for quantitative reasoning,” said Fareedah. “There’s no way I would have gotten these high scores with such a limited time window if not for the great work put in by my teachers towards developing my comprehension abilities and mathematical reasoning skills. I am very grateful to them.”
In a statement issued by the Johns Hopkins Centre for Talented Youth, the Executive Director, Virginia Roach, congratulated Fareedah and other outstanding students across the world, saying, “We are thrilled to celebrate these students. In a year that was anything but ordinary, their love of learning shined through, and we are excited to help cultivate their growth as scholars and citizens throughout high school, college, and beyond.”
The Greensprings Principal (Anthony Campus), Magdalene Okrikri, said Fareedah’s achievement “is a testament that our Thinking School programme is rewarding to our students,” helping them develop mentally and strengthen their cognitive abilities.
The Johns Hopkins Centre for Talented Youth is an initiative of Johns Hopkins University committed to nurturing extraordinary young minds. Its 2020 -2021 programme draws nearly 19,000 students from 84 countries. Fareedah and other honourees from other countries are expected to attend a summer programme in the United States or Hong Kong.