Jesse Stoudt, a 2015 Sturgis Composite High School graduate, was presented the Governor General’s Medal for academics by Brad Cameron, principal, at the school on June 28.
Lord Dufferin, Canada’s third Governor General after Confederation, created the academic medals in 1873 to encourage academic excellence across the nation, said information accompanying the medal. Over the years, they have become the most prestigious award that students in Canadian schools can receive.
For more than 140 years, the Governor General’s Academic Medal has recognized the outstanding scholastic achievements of students in Canada, it said. They are awarded to the student graduating with the highest average from a high school, as well as from approved college or university programs. Pierre Trudeau, Tommy Douglas, Kim Campbell, Robert Bourassa, Robert Stanfield and Gabrielle Roy are just some of the more than 50 000 people who have received the Governor General’s Academic Medal as the start of a life of accomplishment.
Today, the Governor General’s Academic Medal is awarded at four distinct levels: bronze at the secondary school level; collegiate bronze at the post-secondary diploma level; silver at the undergraduate level; and gold at the graduate level. Medals are presented on behalf of the Governor General by participating educational institutions, along with personalized certificates signed by the Governor General. There is no monetary award associated with the medal.
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