2024 Pathfinders scholarship awards honor 54 remarkable Palm Beach, Martin county students
Students from public or private schools were eligible to be nominated for Pathfinders scholarships. Here’s what to know about the winners.
Palm Beach Post
When Vyapti Shahani Subramaniam told adults she wanted to be a neuroscientist when she grew up, she remembers a particularly cruel (and common) response.
“Sweetheart, why don’t you choose a career more appropriate for girls?” they asked her. She said she felt ridiculed and
belittled.
Now a senior at Suncoast High and one of 54 students honored with a 2024 Pathfinder Scholarship Award, Shaha
ni Subramaniam is proving that “a career that’s appropriate for girls” is truly anything a girl wants to be.
“Misogyny is globalized, but equal opportunity is not,” she said. “These oppressive voices made me even more determined as an Indian-American woman to use my opportunities to support the education of underprivileged girls and students in general.”
Shahani Subramaniam, first in her class of 355, applied to a slate of top-ranked schools and now plans to dive into neuroscience and biology at Washington University in St. Louis in the fall. Her goal is to understand and study consciousness and the states of knowing that allow people to perceive our surroundings in terms of “I” and “me.”
She is one of an impressive list of 54 Pathfinders, who were announced Friday at Screen on the Green on Clematis Street in West Palm Beach. Shahani Subramaniam won first place in the Academic Excellence category.
Pathfinder winner knows four languages. Guess where they come in handy the most?
Ryan Aouad, first place finisher in the World Languages category and nominated by West Boca Raton High, explained to the judges that he hopes to be a foreign affairs official and a polyglot, or someone who speaks several languages.
He is well on his way as a teenager: Aouad speaks or is learning Spanish, French, Arabic and Russian.
In addition to being able to trace the etymology of words in romance, central semitic and slavic languages, he said his skills also have far more practical uses.
“At my job as a lifeguard, there were numerous kids that did not speak English, usually from Latin America or Quebec. It was always a good feeling to be able to communicate with them in Spanish or French and convey the age-old rule of “no running!” in different languages,” he said.
Forced to evacuate her hometown for a hurricane, Pathfinder winner took on the challenge
Nikki Leali of FAU High School won first place in the Computer Engineering and Technology category.
Leali was forced to evacuate her home state of Louisiana from Hurricane Ida and move to Florida to start over in the middle of high school and the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Everything I knew about high school ended abruptly on October 13th of 2021,” she said. “The sudden decision forced me to leave behind everything I knew, including multiple volunteer programs I spearheaded. For the rest of my 10th grade year, I navigated as a Florida Virtual student, which was a difficult adjustment.”
But Leali rose to the occasion.
She became a dual-enrolled student at FAU High and began working toward her bachelor’s degree in data analytics. Leali hopes to work on harnessing artificial intelligence to get meaningful insights from complex data sets as the technology evolves.
Pathfinder winner helped fight poverty during internship. Now, she hopes to make a difference in her career
As a summer intern at a nonprofit in Martin County, Jasmine Nunez said it was impossible to ignore the shattered bottles and trash that littered the sidewalk of Bonita Street, a predominantly Hispanic community in Stuart.
Nunez spent the summer helping people living in poverty redeem clothing vouchers, learn English, nurture community gardens and get nutritious meals. When she went back to school at Clark Advanced Learning Center, she realized she had to tap into her Hispanic roots to make a lasting difference in her community.
“There is still much work to be done to eradicate the economic disparities that impact the Hispanic community,” she said. “However, organizations like House of Hope inspire me to further their mission by targeting one of the biggest challenges to food insecurity: a need for more data. I am passionate about filling this data gap and ultimately championing policy.”
As the winner of the 2024 Pathfinder Award for Community Involvement, Nunez has put in nearly 500 community service hours. She hopes to attend law school and find policy solutions to food insecurity.
Editor’s Note: Due to a reporting error, this section originally misstated the location of Nunez’s internship. Her internship took place in Martin County.
Winners of 2024 Pathfinders scholarship awards
This year’s Pathfinder Scholarship Awards garnered 544 nominations and honored students with a total of $117,000.
Along with the top prizes, second and third place winners earned $2,000 and $1,500, respectively, adding to more than $4 million awarded over the event’s history.
“The Pathfinder program is a celebration of high achieving students in Palm Beach and Martin counties,” said Janie Fogt, president of the Pathfinder board of directors. “Tonight, 544 outstanding seniors are in the spotlight for their success in one of 18 categories. The fact that they were chosen by their schools is a great honor, and we are delighted to award 54 of them college scholarships.”
See the full list of winners below:
Academic Excellence
- First place: Vyapti Shahani Subramaniam, Suncoast High
- Second place: Bradley Frishman, American Heritage School
- Third place: Aditya Narayanan, William T. Dwyer High
Art
- First place: Petter Rodriguez, William T. Dwyer High
- Second place: Arabella Sanchez-Garcia, Oxbridge Academy
- Third place: Autumn Johnstone, Jupiter High
Business
- First place: Emilia McGovern, Wellington High
- Second place: Jacob Glover, Spanish River High
- Third place: Pratheek Nathani, American Heritage
Career and Technical Education
- First place: Olivia Angervil, Clark Advanced Learning Center
- Second place: Eden Price, Jupiter Christian School
- Third place: Nandini Patel, The Benjamin School
Communications
- First place: Laila Mayfield, Jensen Beach High
- Second place: Isaac Edelman, West Boca Raton High
- Third place: Dariel Reid, American Heritage
Community Involvement
- First place: Jasmine Nunez, Clark Advanced Learning Center
- Second place: Noah Forman, FAU High
- Third place: Sofia Scher, Spanish River High
Computer Engineering and Technology
- First place: Nikki Leali, FAU High
- Second place: Katelyn Sadorf, Spanish River High
- Third place: Kaitlyn Chen, Dreyfoos School of the Arts
Forensics/Speech
- First place: Sasha DiMare, American Heritage
- Second place: Arik Karim, Dreyfoos School of the Arts
- Third place: Morgan Rafferty, Suncoast High
History
- First place: Shania Grant, FAU High
- Second place: Joelle Carmel, William T. Dwyer High
- Third place: Tanay Warrier, American Heritage
Literature
- First place: Emily Singer, Dreyfoos School of the Arts
- Second place: Nedjie Aurelien, Atlantic High
- Third place: Alessandra Roberts, Saint Andrew’s School
Math
- First place: Matthew Cai, Atlantic High
- Second place: Jesse Brodtman, American Heritage
- Third place: Makena Senzon, Dreyfoos School of the Arts
Music — Instrumental
- First place: Rose Friedman, Suncoast High
- Second place: Julián Fente, Saint Andrew’s School
- Third place: Ryan Vladimir, Boca Raton High
Music — Vocal
- First place: Cassidy Clark, Palm Beach Gardens High
- Second place: Ava Diamond, William T. Dwyer High
- Third place: Olivia Reid, Seminole Ridge High
Reach for Excellence
- First place: Brooke Taylor, Spanish River High
- Second place: Kai Franks, American Heritage
- Third place: Mikayla Jeanty, Park Vista High
Science
- First place: Ava Allwardt, Saint Andrew’s School
- Second place: Nira Goyal, Martin County High
- Third place: Theodore Ouyang, Suncoast High
Sports
- First place: Jake Chavis, FAU High
- Second place: Brynn Stoneburg, Jensen Beach High
- Third place: Cecelia Oneid, Jupiter High
Theater Arts
- First place: Von Markarian, Dreyfoos School of the Arts
- Second place: Johnathon Bucknor, Wellington High
- Third place: Kelsey Bonner, West Boca Raton High
World Language
- First place: Ryan Aouad, West Boca Raton High
- Second place: Addington McKearn, William T. Dwyer High
- Third place: Mario Suarez, Saint Andrew’s School
Katherine Kokal is a journalist covering education at The Palm Beach Post. You can reach her at [email protected].
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Pathfinders scholarships are sponsored by The Palm Beach Post and award each of the first-place winners $3,000. By recognizing students across 18 categories, Pathfinders honors the high school seniors for their achievements inside and outside the classroom.
The scholarship program is now in its 41st year, and Palm Beach Post Executive Editor Rick Christie said it’s the best example of the newspaper’s relationship and investment in our community.
“This is one of my favorite times of year,” Christie said. “These high school graduates are forms of renewal of our ideas, of our ideals and what our community can be.”
Asked what his advice would be to the graduates and winners, Christie encouraged them to remember “whatever you think your limits are, think higher.”
2017: Post’s high school Pathfinders out to change the world: How they’ll do it
The high school seniors who rose to the top
2018: Which Pathfinder Award winner from Wellington is now a big TV star?
Erin Krakow will never forget the night she won