11-year-old Indian American girl declared one of the most promising students in the world

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11-year-old Indian-American girl Natasha Perry has been declared one of the most promising students in the world. This promising Indian-American Natasha Perry, one of around 19000 students from 84 countries, participated in the latest talent hunt and put up a stellar performance.

Washington, PTI. Indian-American girl Natasha Perry (11-years) has been declared one of the most promising students in the world. This promising Indian-American Natasha Perry, one of nearly 19,000 students from 84 countries, took part in the latest talent hunt and put up a stellar performance. Natasha Perry has been awarded by a top US university for exceptional performance in the Educational Assessment Test (SAT) and the American College Test (ACT).

Natasha Perry’s extraordinary performance

Talent doesn’t limit age, 11-year-old Indian-American girl Natasha Perry has proved it. The Educational Assessment Test (SAT) and the American College Test (ACT) are both standardized tests, these tests are used by many colleges to assess the talents of students to determine which students should be admitted to college. All colleges require students to take either the SAT or ACT and submit their scores to their potential universities. Natasha Perry has been judged by a top US university as one of the brightest students in the world for exceptional performance on the SAT and ACT standardized tests.

A statement Monday said that Natasha Perry, a student at Thelma L. Sandmeier Elementary School in New Jersey, was awarded the SAT, ACT, or similar assessments taken as part of the Johns Hopkins Center for Talented Youth Talent (VTY) search. Awarded for exceptional performance.

11-year-old Natasha Perry was one of nearly 19,000 students from 84 countries who joined VTY in the 2020-21 talent search year. Explain that VTY uses the above grade-level test to identify advanced students from around the world and provide a clear picture of their true academic abilities. Perry took the Johns Hopkins Talent Search Test in Spring 2021, when she was in Grade 5. Her results in the verbal and quantitative sections were advanced grade 8 with a 90th percentile of performance. Perry succeeded in the cut for the Johns Hopkins VTY “High Honors Awards”.

Perry said that it inspires me to do more, Perry wants to do and learn a lot in the future for which ‘he said that doodling and reading J. R. R. Tolkien’s novels could work for him.