Student can take his pick from some of world’s top universities

A high school student in Nuevo León has been invited to continue his studies on a full scholarship by some of the world’s top universities.

Nine universities —Harvard, Yale, Stanford, Columbia, Rice, Duke, Brown, Dartmouth and the University of Pennsylvania — have granted admission and scholarships to Daniel Marín Quiroz, 18, and all but one would be on a full scholarship.

Yale was the exception, offering to waive 92% of his tuition. Additionally, Harvard and Stanford universities offered to cover all of the young scholar’s living expenses.

Marín, who is a student at the Tecnológico de Monterrey Preparatory School, said that to gain admission to the universities he had to attend numerous interviews in person and on Skype, pass the SAT college admissions exam and submit a series of letters of recommendation.

He was further able to demonstrate his abilities through his history of participation in international and national physics and mathematics competitions. He has won the gold medal twice at the National Physics Olympiad and won a bronze medal last year at the International Physics Olympiad in Portugal.

Marín also composes electronic music, plays drums, guitar and piano, and tutors other students in mathematics and physics in his spare time.

He is currently taking stock of his options to decide which course of study will best further his career and research goals.

“My choice as to where I will study for the next four years of my life is right now between Harvard and Stanford University. I will study economics, computer science and theoretical physics.”

Source: El Universal (sp)

Have something to say? Paid Subscribers get all access to make & read comments.

Xcaret theme park banned from using Maya culture for marketing, for now.

1
The ruling will stay in effect only until the Supreme Court makes a final decision on what could be a landmark case for Mexico's cultural future

FIFA president Infantino attends Guadalajara qualifier, signaling confidence in Mexico as World Cup host

0
The World Cup qualifiers marked Guadalajara's first major sporting event since El Mencho's death. All went off without a hitch as Jamaica beat New Caledonia before a packed Akron Stadium.

Signs of life found for 40,000 of Mexico’s 132,000 missing persons

4
The National Public Security System has long been hampered in its searches by unreliable and missing data. Now, a new push toward more efficient techniques and procedures is starting to bear fruit.
BETA Version - Powered by Perplexity