Westmont Magazine New Semester Brings New Students
New students arrive for orientation
The newest class of students, 333 young men and women slated to graduate in 2012, arrived on campus in August for four days of orientation before beginning their first college courses. The incoming class is one of the most talented academically, but also one of the most diverse. There are 111 students of color, a third of the total enrolling for the fall semester.
“We are thrilled and excited to welcome this new group of students to Westmont as they begin their college journey,” says Joyce Luy, dean of admission. “We are confident each one brings with them new gifts and talents that will merge with our returning students and continue to make Westmont the exceptional college community we know it to be.”
Nine National Merit scholars have chosen to attend Westmont, bringing the total on campus to 19. More than 70 percent of first-year students earned academic merit scholarships ranging from $8,000 to $12,000. The average SAT (critical reading and math) score of the first-year students jumped 10 points to 1210.
Westmont also welcomes 72 transfer students, more than a third from out of state, including 10 international students. There are 35 first-year students from Santa Barbara, Ventura and San Luis Obispo counties.
Westmont has selected four Monroe Scholars, the seventh straight year it has honored top students with full-tuition scholarships.
This year’s recipients have an average honors GPA of 4.41 and an average SAT (critical reading and math) score of 1550.
The Monroe scholars include Carrie Steingruber, Carrollton, Texas; Reyn Halford, Honolulu; Stacey Torigoe, Hilo, Hawaii; and Karly Noblitt, Thousand Oaks, Calif.
Halford is thinking about a major in religious studies or something with a pre-med focus. He says it was Westmont’s unique combination of deep faith and rigorous academics that attracted him the most. “Westmont is the only school that maintains the perfect balance of academics with a faithful pursuit of who Christ wants us to be,” he says. “Other Christian colleges are either lacking the whole-hearted commitment to the message of Christ or are lacking the rigor of academics.”