Atlanta high school senior Makenzie Thompson wanted to have plenty of choices when it came to college. So, she hedged her bets and applied to 51 schools across the country, from Texas to Illinois to Delaware.
Thompson, 18, did not expect to be accepted to 49 of them, nor that she would receive $1.3 million in scholarship offers from the schools combined.
“The acceptances started coming in the mail and over email. My parents were like, ‘wow, there’s another one.’ We saw the folder getting thicker and thicker over time,” Thompson recounted to Know Your Value. “Acceptance is one thing, but once you see that they were going to offer me money—that really started adding up fast.”
Thompson’s believes her 4.0 grade point average and extracurricular resume likely stood out to the admissions officials. She is class president at Westlake High School in Atlanta, Georgia, co-captain of the varsity dance team, manager of the baseball team, and much, much more.
“I’m the type that has to keep busy. I like to participate anytime I have free time. When dance season was over, I took on baseball,” she said. “During Covid-19, I became really anxious and bored at home so I ran for junior class vice president virtually and won.”
Thompson’s only rejections came from Cornell University and the University of Illinois, she said.
After her acceptances rolled in, Thompson started visiting some of her prospective choices. Almost right away, she knew deep down that she wanted to attend Tuskegee University in Alabama.
“Tuskegee’s environment and the atmosphere, the campus life, it made me feel like I was at home and that I would thrive there,” she said.








